Los Angeles Times

The GameStop frenzy: ‘Old is new again’

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

So you think the stock market frenzy in GameStop is something new under the sun?

You’re not alone. Investment pundits pondering the ridiculous run-up in shares of this moneylosin­g retailer are searching for the big picture, itching

to show they’re on to something more profound than a spin of Wall Street’s roulette wheel.

Rule of Thumb: Any time someone asserts about some phenomenon on Wall Street that “this time is different,” run away. Nothing is new about the GameStop run-up except its instrument, which is the Reddit online forum WallStreet­Bets.

“We Boomers remember the late-90’s chat rooms very well,” a veteran investor who tweets under the handle “Diogenes” and is widely thought to be short seller Jim Chanos, observed Tuesday. “And how the masses turned on their leaders like ‘Tokyo Joe’ once the losses began to mount. Everything old is new again.”

He’s right. His reference was to the spate of free internet discussion sites that sprang up in the 1990s offering real-time stock picks, ostensibly endowed with you-heard-it-here-first magic, but in reality driven by penny stock promoters and rumor-mongering.

Tokyo Joe (real name: Yun Soo Oh Park) became one of the most notorious chat room leaders, ultimately to be charged with fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which alleged that he pumped up stocks by pushing them to his legion of dues-paying followers, then dumped them at their artificial­ly inflated price.

No one has alleged thus far that the promoters on WallStreet­Bets have done anything illegal.

It’s possible that the SEC will look into whether they’re engaged illicitly in stock manipulati­on — the market action is too frenzied to be ignored — but securities lawyers say that would be a hard case to make without evidence of coordinate­d transactio­ns.

Before examining the long, long history of stock market manias, a reminder of what’s happening with GameStop. As we reported earlier, shares of GameStop have been on a weeks-long tear — up 1,744% this month alone, closing Wednesday at $347.51, from $18.84 on Dec. 31.

The run-up has been driven largely by a “short squeeze” targeting big investors who disdained the stock and heavily sold it short, betting that the stock would go down, indeed that the company was headed for bankruptcy.

The David versus Goliath story is that the short sellers have been bested by a ragtag army of Reddit followers taking it upon themselves to give Wall Street short sellers a spanking.

Similar attacks have been launched on short sellers in other stocks, including the cinema company AMC Entertainm­ent, which soared 301% to $19.90 on Wednesday.

Market manias always appear to herald a fundamenta­l change in investor psychology or practice, and never do. They tend to have several features in common.

One is that they’re often driven by market gurus who attract large followings through cocksure projection­s of the future or observatio­ns about the present. “People have been shown to prefer commentato­rs with unwavering confidence over those who are more reserved and have actually gotten things right,” Josh Brown and Jeff Macke wrote in their great 2014 book “Clash of the Financial Pundits.”

Their comments applied to what happened Jan. 6, 1981, when financial pundit Joe Granville flashed an “early warning” to the thousands of subscriber­s to his stock market newsletter: “Sell everything,” he wrote. “Market top has been reached.”

Granville’s declaratio­n was reminiscen­t of that of renowned economist Irving Fisher that stocks had “reached a permanentl­y high plateau.” He made this audacious observatio­n on Oct. 15, 1929, or about 10 days before the string of black days heralding the great crash.

Granville’s flash took the Dow Jones industrial average down by some 4% on historic trading volume over the next two days, an extraordin­ary decline for the era.

Eventually Granville ran out his string. He kept counseling subscriber­s to sell the market short, even after stocks began a historic bull run in 1982. That cost his followers millions.

Investors follow the crowd at their peril. Cheerleade­rs come and go. In the late 1890s there was Roswell Pettibone Flower, a former New York governor described as “the bull market incarnate.” Investors hung on his every word then, the way investors try to track the buying and selling of Warren Buffett today.

As I reported in my book about the Gilded Age, “Iron Empires,” Flower drove up shares of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., a trolley line, by placing its target price at $75 when it was trading at $20, at $125 when it reached $50, and eventually at $135.

Just then, however, Flower was felled by a heart attack. The air rushed out of “Flower stocks” like out of a punctured balloon. J. Pierpont Morgan and his fellow bankers had to pump millions in capital into the market to forestall a downturn.

Granville, Fisher and Flower then, WallStreet­Bets today. Their prognostic­ations and claims are all based on the same expectatio­ns — that tomorrow will look just like today, only more so, and that today is different from yesterday.

Over the decades, stock run-ups and run-downs have always been explained by some phenomenon that is unique and permanent. BusinessWe­ek proclaimed “the death of equities” in 1979 because of high interest rates. In the roaring 1980s, “liquidity,” or the supposedly bottomless pool of investable cash, was expected to prop up the stock market forever. In the 1990s, dot-coms changed the nature of business for good. And today, Reddit and retail brokerages catering to small investors, such as Robinhood, supposedly have given those investors power they never had to beat Wall Street pros.

These expectatio­ns are always true, until the moment they stop being true. Then everyone rushes for the exit, all at once. If you’re buying into GameStop, keep your eye on the door.

 ?? Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? NOTHING is new about the GameStop run-up except its instrument: the online forum WallStreet­Bets.
Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times NOTHING is new about the GameStop run-up except its instrument: the online forum WallStreet­Bets.
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