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AMC and other meme stocks fall on Friday to wrap up a wild week

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The AMC Empire 25 near Times Square is open as New York City's cinemas reopen for the first time in a year following the coronavirus shutdown, on March 5, 2021.
Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

It's been quite the week for AMC Entertainment and other meme stocks as frenzied trading inspired by Reddit's chatrooms swept through Wall Street yet again.

These speculative stocks fell on Friday but still wrapped up the wild week with massive gains.

AMC shares lost 6.7% on Friday after dropping 18% in the previous session. The stock still rallied 83.4% on the week. BlackBerry sank 12.7% on Friday, but gained 37.6% this week. Bed Bath & Beyond dipped 0.6%, but ended the week 13.3% higher.

The original meme stock star GameStop dipped 3.8% Friday after gaining 111.9% this week. Trading has been relatively quiet for GameStop as of late as AMC captured most of the attention.

AMC is wasting no time in taking advantage of its massive rally and raising new capital. CEO Adam Aron asked shareholders in a YouTube live chat Thursday night to allow his company to issue up to 25 million more shares. This came after AMC sold 20 million shares in two separate deals over this past week, generating around $800 million in cash.

The first transaction involved Mudrick Capital, which paid more than $230 million for 8.5 million shares. Then, AMC revealed Thursday that it had sold an additional 11.5 million shares for $587 million.

Trading volume in AMC and other meme stocks exploded this week as retail traders on the infamous WallStreetBets forum continued to encourage each other to pile in. AMC and Blackberry both traded over 500 million shares on Thursday, becoming the two most active stocks on the Nasdaq.

The frantic trading frustrated many Wall Street analysts who predict stock prices based on companies' fundamentals. Bank of America analyst Curtis Nagle threw in the towel on Beth Bath & Beyond, moving the stock to a "no rating."

"BBBY's share price increase corresponds to big moves over the past week with 'meme stocks' such as GME, AMC and BB," Nagle said in a note to clients. "As a result, we move to No Rating as we believe shares of BBBY are no longer trading on fundamentals. Investors should no longer rely upon our previous investment opinion or price objective."

Bank of America also terminated coverage of GameStop, citing a reallocation of resources.

Short-covering could be at play again for these speculative names favored by Reddit traders. AMC has around 18% of its float shares sold short, versus about 5% for an average U.S. stock, according to data from S3 Partners. Short sellers betting against AMC have suffered $2 billion losses this week, S3 data showed.

"We have seen AMC short covering this week, but by no means are we seeing a wholesale short squeeze in this stock at the moment," said Ihor Dusaniwsky of S3 Partners.

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