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  • AMC extends losing streak to five days, hits another record low close

    AMC extends losing streak to five days, hits another record low close

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    AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. extended its losing streak to five days Friday, with the stock ending the session down 2.5% to $5.15.

    AMC
    AMC,
    -2.45%

    shares are now on their longest losing streak since a seven-day slide that ended on Aug. 29, 2023. The movie-theater chain and onetime meme-stock darling ended Thursday’s session at a then-record-low close of $5.30. AMC was a top trending symbol on Stocktwits, a social platform for investors and traders, at Friday’s open.

    The stock’s previous record closing low had been $6.07, which was set on Dec. 21, 2023, according to Dow Jones Market Data, citing available information dating back to Dec. 18, 2013.

    Related: AMC hits another record-low close, extends losing streak to four days

    The decline in AMC’s share price is a far cry from its meme-stock heyday, when it hit an all-time closing high of $339.05 on June 2, 2021.

    In a regulatory filing Tuesday, AMC said that between Dec. 28 and Dec. 29, 2023, the company entered into a series of privately negotiated exchange agreements to issue nearly 3.26 million shares of Class A common stock in exchange for $22.5 million of its notes due in 2026.  The common stock issued had an implied value of $6.94 per share, according to AMC. “The company may engage in similar transactions in the future but is under no obligation to do so,” AMC said in the filing.

    The move is the latest in AMC’s attempts to tackle its debt burden, which reached more than $5 billion in 2022. That year, AMC launched its APE special dividend, and in 2023 it completed the conversion of the APEs into AMC common stock and a reverse 1-for-10 split of common stock. 

    Related: AMC CEO slams ‘prophets of doom,’ says company is ‘blazing new trails’ as it enters 2024

    In December, AMC also completed its latest at-the-market equity offering, raising approximately $350 million. AMC CEO Adam Aron has repeatedly warned that the company faces liquidity challenges

    AMC shares are down 84.8% in the last 12 months, compared with S&P 500 index’s
    SPX
    gain of 20.6%.

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  • This is what we can expect to see from meme stocks in 2024

    This is what we can expect to see from meme stocks in 2024

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    It may be a couple of years since the meme-stock feeding frenzy hit its heights, but we’re still seeing occasional bursts of meme-like activity in number of stocks.

    No discussion of meme stocks would be complete without OG AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
    AMC,
    -0.89%
    .
    But while the movie theater chain and original meme stock darling still grabs plenty of attention, it no longer fits the bill of a meme stock, according to Alicia Reese, VP of equity research at Wedbush. “AMC has seemingly lost its meme status, its share price having come crashing back down to earth over the past several months, particularly since its APE fold-in and reverse stock split,” she said. “AMC is now trading at a more normalized valuation, even if still at the high-end of its pre-meme historic range.”

    AMC’s shares ended Friday’s session at $6.65, a far cry from their high of $393.63 on June 2, 2021, during the meme-stock frenzy.

    Related: AMC’s stock falls more than 5% after company completes $350 million equity offering

    “AMC’s premium valuation here is driven in part by a sub-section of the shareholders it gained during its meme stage, who have remained loyal to the company and have long claimed to be AMC shareholders for life,” Reese added. “AMC shed all the rest of its meme-era shareholders and are now left with the lifers, along with some institutional shareholders now that valuation has come back to a more normalized range.”

    The analyst thinks that in 2024, AMC will continue to issue pre-authorized shares to pay down its high-debt balance, as evidenced by the $350 million equity offering completed this week. “The company is focused on right-sizing the balance sheet, while attempting to maintain strong relations with the AMC lifers still propping up the stock,” said Reese.

    Fellow original meme stock GameStop has also been in the news recently, with the company’s board of directors approving a new investment policy, which lets the company invest in equity securities, among other investments. The board also gave Chairman and Chief Executive Ryan Cohen the authority to manage the investment portfolio. The new policy was dubbed “alarming” and “inane” by Wedbush Managing Director Michael Pachter.

    “If he can invest in anything – farmland, chicken feed, cryptocurrency – that’s not in the best interests of the shareholders,” he told MarketWatch. “Heaven knows what he will do.”

    Related: GameStop’s plan to buy stocks with company cash ‘alarming’ and ‘inane,’ analyst says

    As for GameStop, the analyst describes the videogame retailer as a declining business, pointing to the company’s third-quarter revenue of $1.078 billion, which was down from $1.186 billion in the prior year’s quarter. “They are shrinking, period, and they can’t save their way to prosperity,” he added.

    The company’s new investment policy could also fuel more meme-style activity, according to Pachter, who says that Cohen’s moves will be closely watched. “He will invest in something and it will possibly become the next meme stock,” the analyst told MarketWatch. 

    Pachter pointed to Cohen’s decision in 2022 to unload his huge stake in beleaguered home goods retailer and sometime meme stock Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. just months after buying it. In August of that year Cohen sold his entire stake in Bed Bath & Beyond five months after accruing the stake in an activist campaign, amassing a profit of more than $58 million.

    Stocktwits, a social platform for investors and traders, told MarketWatch that it has seen a dedicated core audience of retail investors stick with the likes of AMC and GameStop. “Message volume and sentiment have remained elevated on the platform throughout the year, with their audiences growing temporarily around earnings or other events that create volatility,” Tom Bruni, senior writer at Stocktwits, told MarketWatch.

    Related: Small-cap Chinese stocks spark meme-like buzz

    Retail traders are still on the lookout for high-volatility situations, according to Bruni, who cited the example of Vietnamese electric vehicle stock VinFast Auto Ltd.
    VFS,
    +13.54%
    ,
    which had a “crazy month” in August before crashing back down. “However, we would note that there have been fewer instances of these types of meme stocks occurring this year, and their lifespan tended to be pretty short,” he added.

    “For stocks with the ‘meme’ potential in 2024, look to beaten-down areas of the market that already have strong retail investor communities around them,” Bruni told MarketWatch. “Several that stick out are electric vehicle stocks (specifically startups), solar stocks, or anything China-related. Traders will likely be looking for stocks at the intersection of these themes, like Lucid Group ($LCID), as potential ‘powder kegs’ for volatility in 2024.”

    Shares of Lucid Group Inc.
    LCID,
    -7.20%

    are down 30.2% in 2023, compared with the S&P 500 index’s
    SPX
    gain of 22.9%.

    One thing is for sure – the social media dynamics that created the meme stock phenomenon are not going away. “Internet culture will continue to be more prevalent in markets as the world becomes more digitized and young people age into participation,” Tommy Tranfo, head of community at Stocktwits, told MarketWatch. “Crypto markets are an area where we expect to see a large concentration of this activity, particularly within the context of a crypto bull market, which will likely bring in a new wave of market participants who will skew toward the internet culture demo.”

    Related: This EV company has a bigger market cap than Ford or GM. But you may not have heard of it.

    “New crypto meme communities such as the $BONK (a dog-themed coin on the Solana blockchain) are already clear examples of this craze taking place,” he added.

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  • AMC swings to Q3 profit, reports positive net income for second consecutive quarter

    AMC swings to Q3 profit, reports positive net income for second consecutive quarter

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    AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. reported third-quarter results that beat top- and bottom-line expectations Wednesday, as the movie-theater chain and meme-stock darling swung to a profit.

    The company swung to net income of $12.3 million, or 8 cents a share, compared with a loss of $226.9 million, or $2.20 a share, in the prior year’s quarter. Excluding nonrecurring items, AMC
    AMC,
    -1.27%

    reported a loss of 9 cents a share. Analysts surveyed by FactSet were looking for a loss of 25 cents a share.

    Related: AMC bonds see bullish activity while meme-stock darling rides the Taylor Swift wave

    Revenue grew 45.2% to $1.406 billion, above the FactSet consensus of $1.260 billion. AMC’s adjusted Ebitda was $194 million.

    “For both revenue and adjusted Ebitda, these were AMC’s most successful third-quarter results in our company’s entire 103-year history, by definition being greater than the third quarter of pre-pandemic 2019,” AMC Chief Executive Adam Aron said in a statement. “For the second consecutive quarter, AMC reported positive net income, and we ended the quarter with $730 million of cash. This all suggests that we are well underway on our growth path to recovery from the ravages of the COVID pandemic.”

    Related: The ‘Barbenheimer’ buzz may be over, but consumer enthusiasm for movies is still strong, says Cinemark CEO

    “What is perhaps most impressive of all is that our success in the third quarter came at a time when our attendance at the domestic box office in the quarter was still 16% below comparable 2019 levels,” Aron added. “That success is because our contribution per patron was up 30% versus 2019.”

    Admissions revenue was $797.7 million, above the FactSet consensus of $739 million. Food and beverage revenue was $482.7 million, above the FactSet consensus of $449 million.

    AMC’s stock fell 1.3% in extended trading Wednesday. The company’s shares are down 71.9% in 2023, compared with the S&P 500 index’s
    SPX
    gain of 14.2%.

    Related: AMC’s debt-to-equity, late payments, could be ‘red flags,’ warns Creditsafe

    Speaking during a conference call to discuss the results, Aron said that the short-term impact of the writers’ and actors’ strikes will cause challenges for AMC in 2024. “Without taking sides … we strongly encourage all the parties involved to come to the negotiating table with the intent of reaching an agreement immediately,” he said.

    The AMC CEO also discussed the success of Taylor Swift’s record-breaking concert film, which opened Oct. 12. “Both as distributor and exhibitor, AMC benefited handsomely,” he said, adding that AMC Theatres Distribution is following this success with the release of “Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé,” which hits theaters globally Dec. 1.

    “In working with two of the most admired pop stars on the planet, we already have touched lightning,” Aron added. “We are optimistic, though, that this will lead to much more ahead … we believe that we will have several more concert film products in 2024 and 2025. We intend to be working with some of the most known and most loved musical artists the world has ever known.”

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  • AMC shares rise as meme-stock darling eyes another big Taylor Swift weekend

    AMC shares rise as meme-stock darling eyes another big Taylor Swift weekend

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    For AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., “Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour” is the gift that keeps on giving.

    Taylor Swift’s record-breaking concert film, which opened Oct. 12, is in its third weekend at the box office and has already brought in more than $178 million worldwide, according to IMDbPro’s Box Office Mojo.

    “Weekend #3 for Taylor Swift The Eras Tour: Thursday through Sunday,” tweeted AMC CEO Adam Aaron Wednesday. “Playing at all AMC & Odeon theatres in the U.S. & Europe. The highest grossing concert film of all time. CinemaScore A+, RT 99%/98%. See the phenomenon that has captivated the world.”

    Related: AMC still riding a ‘Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour’ wave

    Earlier this week Aaron tweeted that the movie enjoyed a successful second weekend in theaters. “It’s such a privilege to report that Taylor Swift The Eras Tour won the weekend again!” he wrote on Monday. “The first ever movie distributed by AMC, it had the biggest box office gross last weekend and this weekend! Grossed $179 million so far. All the credit goes to the extraordinary Taylor Swift!”

    Set against this backdrop AMC
    AMC,
    -0.87%

    shares rose 1.9% Friday and are on pace to snap a two-day losing streak.

    In addition to showing “Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour” in its theaters, AMC  is also the theatrical distributor for the movie. AMC Theatres Distribution and subdistribution partners Variance Films, Trafalgar Releasing, Cinepolis and Cineplex Inc. have clinched deals with movie-theater operators representing more than 8,500 theaters globally to show the film, according to AMC.

    EXCLUSIVE: AMC boosted by Taylor Swift and summer blockbusters, cinema foot-traffic data show

    “Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour” remained atop the domestic box office last weekend, ahead of Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon,” which brought in an estimated $23 million on its debut weekend, according to Comscore data released Sunday. The new Scorsese movie, which stars Leonardo DiCaprio, also enjoyed a strong opening weekend internationally, bringing in an estimated $21 million.

    Shares of movie theater chain and meme stock darling AMC have fallen 73.8% in 2023, compared with S&P 500 index’s
    SPX
    gain of 7.2%.

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  • Taylor Swift’s film opened Thursday, surprising (and disappointing) some fans

    Taylor Swift’s film opened Thursday, surprising (and disappointing) some fans

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    So much for being the first in line for the highly anticipated Taylor Swift “Eras Tour” concert film.

    With the last-minute news that the film’s release was being moved to Thursday instead of the originally announced date of Friday, some Swift fans have expressed frustration that they may have to buy tickets all over again.

    Or as one commented Wednesday on X (formerly Twitter), “you’re telling me I had to fight for my life on the cineplex website for opening day tickets just for her to add showtimes tmrw?”

    Swift revealed the change to the film’s release schedule on Wednesday, saying, “Due to unprecedented demand we’re opening up early access showings of The Eras Tour Concert Film on THURSDAY in America and Canada!!”

    Swift attended the film’s premiere in Los Angeles on Wednesday night, joined by some 2,200 fans. But on Thursday, she was back to taking in a Kansas City Chiefs game, according to an Associated Press report.

    Swift has attended other Chiefs games this season to root on tight end Travis Kelce. The pair are said to have a growing relationship.

    Some Swifties greeted the announcement of the film’s new Thursday release date with joy. “Taylor Swift always knows how to surprise us! Can’t wait for this incredible journey to begin!” said one.

    But others were disappointed that they no longer had those first-to-see bragging rights. And they suddenly were faced with the dilemma of having to buy tickets all over again if they wanted to maintain that position. In turn, that left them with the problem of what to do with the tickets they purchased for Friday showings.

    One commenter on X thought it was pretty savvy of Swift to boost the box office this way, saying the singer is “getting more sales out of her fans by moving opening night.”

    Another commenter also said this was “a smart move” on Swift and her team’s part.

    Not that theaters haven’t already sold plenty of seats for the film. The movie is set to have at least a $150 million opening, according to the Hollywood Reporter, and has buoyed the AMC
    AMC,
    +5.57%

    and Cinemark
    CNK,
    -2.66%

    chains.

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  • AMC stock tumbles after filing prospectus supplement for the sale of up to 40 million shares

    AMC stock tumbles after filing prospectus supplement for the sale of up to 40 million shares

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    Shares of AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. AMC tumbled 13.9% toward the lowest price seen since January 2021 after the movie theater operator disclosed an equity distribution agreement in which the company could sell up to 40 million common shares. That would represent up to 7.7% of the common shares outstanding. The shares sales, if any, may be “at the market offerings” or could be to sales agents through block trades. The stock, which underwent a 1-for-10 reverse stock split on Aug. 24, was on track to open at the lowest price seen during regular-session hours since Jan. 15, 2021. It has tumbled 66.7% over the past three…

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  • U.S. stocks end higher after Fed Chair Powell’s Jackson Hole remarks, S&P 500 snaps 3-week losing streak

    U.S. stocks end higher after Fed Chair Powell’s Jackson Hole remarks, S&P 500 snaps 3-week losing streak

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    U.S. stocks ended higher Friday after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned the central bank may need to raise interest rates even higher to temper a strong U.S. economy and quell inflation, while assuring investors that monetary policy would proceed cautiously.

    How stock indexes traded

    For the week, the Dow fell 0.4%, the S&P 500 gained 0.8% and the Nasdaq climbed 2.3%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Dow booked back-to-back weekly losses, while the S&P 500 and technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite each…

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  • Tupperware and Yellow have skyrocketed, but don’t confuse them with meme stocks

    Tupperware and Yellow have skyrocketed, but don’t confuse them with meme stocks

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    All eyes have been on shares of Tupperware Brands Corp. and Yellow Corp. in recent days as the stocks have soared despite a dearth of fresh news in the case of the former, and negative news in the case of the latter.

    Shares of the beleaguered maker of iconic food-storage containers enjoyed a record 434% gain in July on no apparent news. Yellow’s stock
    YELL,
    -26.15%

    has also skyrocketed, despite reports that the trucking company is facing bankruptcy.

    Over the weekend the Wall Street Journal reported that the less-than-truckload company has shut down operations as it prepares for bankruptcy. On Monday the International Brotherhood of Teamsters said it was served legal notice that Yellow was “ceasing operations and filing for bankruptcy.” MarketWatch has reached out to Yellow with a request for comment.

    Related: How ‘left-for-dead’ Tupperware became a buzzy trading play

    Set against this backdrop, the surging share prices for Tupperware
    TUP,
    -25.99%

    and Yellow have sparked comparisons with the meme stock phenomenon, where discussions on social media can send share prices surging. This trend turned companies such as AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
    AMC,
    -3.45%

    and GameStop Corp.
    GME,
    -4.42%

    into meme stock “darlings” in recent years. But Samantha LaDuc, founder of LaDucTrading.com, says there’s a different explanation for what’s been happening to shares of Tupperware and Yellow.

    “Literally, it’s short covering, as the paired trade of long quality, short junk unwinds,” she told MarketWatch, via email. “And it typically always precedes volatility.”

    Short selling of a stock occurs when an investor borrows shares and sells them immediately expecting the price to drop. The shares can then be repurchased and returned to the lender, with the investor pocketing the difference. Although sometimes vilified, short sellers are actually misunderstood, Robert Sloan, managing partner at financial analytics firm S3 Partners and author of “Don’t Blame the Shorts,” recently told MarketWatch.

    Related: Short selling stocks — and trying to play short squeezes — can be very dangerous

    In a letter to investors this week, Dan Loeb, the chief executive of the hedge-fund firm Third Point, explained that short selling is much more challenging today than it has been historically.

    “Fundamental analysis is increasingly taking a back seat to monitoring daily option expiries and Reddit message boards, as evidenced by the numerous short squeezes and manipulations of heavily shorted stocks such as AMC and GameStop in 2021 and others this year,” he wrote. “While we have not abandoned short selling, we continue to reduce our single-name short exposure in favor of market hedges and short baskets.”

    LaDuc explained that in June and July hedge funds aggressively covered shorts in global equities, and also noted the trend of FOMO, or fear of missing out.

    “We have had the largest six-month increase in leverage on record (according to Goldman), with a clear case of FOMO-the-MOMO [momentum] chase in full view as concentration risk in megacap tech forced a NASDAQ “SPECIAL REBALANCE” to ‘down-weight’ AAPL, MSFT, GOOGL etc.”

    Related: Short sellers are not evil, but they are misunderstood

    Short covering occurs when a person with a short position buys back the shares, ending the short trade, and returns the shares to the seller. With this strategy, the short seller aims to cover after the share price falls and make a profit. They may also cover if the price goes up to limit their losses.

    Last week LaDuc told MarketWatch how she was able to anticipate a Tupperware stock spike despite a dearth of traditional market-moving news around the name.

    Tupperware’s stock has continued its upward trajectory, rocketing again on Tuesday. The stock eventually ended Tuesday’s session up 26% at $5.38, with LaDuc warning her clients of the risks involved in a parabolic rally. “I suggested to clients it was likely done and to be very cautious if still long because ‘Parabolas are trapped longs that can trigger volatility which can trigger a liquidation event’.”

    Related: Yellow’s stock quadruples in 2 days even after reports that bankruptcy is coming

    Shares of Tupperware are down 23.2% Wednesday. Yellow Corp.’s stock, which ended Tuesday’s session up 121.6%, is down 17.3% Wednesday.

    With regard to Yellow Corp. LaDuc attributes its recent stock movements to insider and Wall Street manipulation. “Low priced, low-float stocks are VERY easy to push around,” she told MarketWatch.

    Bankrupt companies such as Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.
    BBBYQ,
    +1.46%

    have even proven attractive to some investors recently, sparking comparisons with the meme stock phenomenon.

    “They are clearly retail investors, largely on the Robinhood 
    HOOD,
    -4.16%

     platform, that are readers of Reddit,” Howard Ehrenberg, a bankruptcy and reorganization practice partner at law firm Greenspoon Marder, told MarketWatch last month. “They are people buying on rumor and hoping that by participating in a mass purchase binge, they will make money.”

    Related: Tupperware stock skyrockets to a record 434% gain in July

    Hertz Global Holdings Inc.
    HTZ,
    -1.73%
    ,
    which filed for bankruptcy protection in 2020 and exited bankruptcy the following year, also fueled meme-stock comparisons, when mostly retail investors piled into the stock during the bankruptcy process.

    Typically in a bankruptcy, shareholders are wiped out as creditors take control of the remaining assets. But those investors were rewarded when the company got a big capital injection and was able to resume trading on an exchange.

    The investor behavior around these types of stocks has caught the attention of academics. Victor Ricciardi, visiting finance faculty at Tennessee Tech University and co-author of the new book “Advanced Introduction to Behavioral Finance,” recently described some of the behaviors that can prompt investors to purchase bankrupt stocks.

    “Representativeness bias refers to when past performance influences how an individual perceives an investment,” Ricciardi told MarketWatch via email last month. “In particular, a person makes a general assumption about a small sample of information or experience.”

    Related: Why investors gamble on shares of bankrupt companies — Bed Bath & Beyond, for example

    So, for example, if a person made a substantial gain from a previous bankrupt stock they might conclude that all bankrupt stocks result in investment gains, according to Ricciardi. There are also parallels with gambling.

    “The notion of the long shot bias is based on the tendency for people to overweight the probability of a long shot bet paying off, especially in horse racing and lotteries,” Ricciardi added. “This is driven by overconfident behavior and dreams of becoming a millionaire overnight.”

    Tupperware’s stock has risen 250.6% in the last three months, while Yellow shares have climbed 84.3%.

    Tomi Kilgore and Phil van Doorn contributed to this report.

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  • AMC had its busiest weekend since 2019, boosted by ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’

    AMC had its busiest weekend since 2019, boosted by ‘Barbie’ and ‘Oppenheimer’

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    AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. AMC
    AMC,
    +1.62%

    has had its busiest weekend since 2019, boosted by the blockbuster openings of “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer,” the company said Monday. More than 7.8 million moviegoers in the U.S. and worldwide saw a movie at AMC between Thursday and Sunday, AMC said, in a statement. That marks AMC’s biggest and busiest weekend since 2019 based on global attendance and global admissions revenue. At its U.S. locations, the movie theater chain and meme stock darling also set a new post-reopening single-day attendance record Saturday. It was also AMC’s busiest day since July 2019, the company said. On Saturday, AMC also recorded its second-highest food and beverage day at its U.S. locations. “What a fabulous weekend for moviegoers at AMC’s movie theatres in the U.S. and abroad. AMC sends an enormous thank you and congratulations to Greta Gerwig, Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling, and the entire team at Warner Bros., and to Christopher Nolan and the team at Universal Pictures,” said AMC CEO Adam Aron, in a statement. “They’ve demonstrated that well-made, well-marketed films that captivate audiences can open on the same weekend and both enjoy great success.” Aron also highlighted the “on-going solid performances” of “Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One” and “Sound of Freedom.” AMC’s stock skyrocketed 35.7% in premarket trades Monday after Friday’s surprise court setback for the company’s stock-conversion plan.

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  • AMC revises stock-conversion settlement plan after Friday’s surprise court setback

    AMC revises stock-conversion settlement plan after Friday’s surprise court setback

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    AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. has submitted a revised proposal for its stock-conversion plan, after a judge rejected a settlement Friday that would have given a green light to the deal.

    In a letter to investors that was posted Sunday on Twitter, AMC Chief Executive Adam Aron said that a modified proposal was filed Saturday with the Delaware Chancery Court intended to address the court’s concerns. If the court agrees, Aron said he hopes to implement the plan “as soon as possible.”

    Movie-theater chain AMC
    AMC,
    +1.62%

     has wanted to turn its its so-called APE
    APE,
    -2.17%

    — or AMC Preferred Equity — preferred units into common stock as part of its battle to eliminate debt. But Delaware Chancery Court Vice Chancellor Morgan Zurn on Friday rejected a settlement with opposing shareholders that would have allowed that conversion to move forward. That sent AMC shares rocketing more than 60% higher in after-hours trading Friday.

    “AMC must be in a position to raise equity capital,” Aron stressed in his letter Sunday, saying that if the company is unable to do so, the risk of running out of cash in 2024 or 2025 rises.

    “The risk of financial collapse is not whimsical,” Aron said, noting the bankruptcies of rival theater chain Cineworld/Regal and retailer Bey Bath & Beyond.

    AMC shares are up 8% year to date, but have sunk 54% over the past 12 months.

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  • Mullen Automotive’s stock more than doubles in 2 days. Here’s why.

    Mullen Automotive’s stock more than doubles in 2 days. Here’s why.

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    Shares of Mullen Automotive Inc. rocketed on massive volume for a second-straight day, after the electric vehicle maker announced plans to buy back a chunk of its shares.

    The company
    MULN,
    +29.02%

    said it believes its stock is “significantly undervalued,” given its current cash position of about $235 million. Therefore, the board of directors have authorized the repurchase of up to $25 million worth of its outstanding shares through the end of this year.

    The buyback amount represents 17.1% of Mullen’s current market capitalization of about $145.8 million.

    “We are initiating this buyback program as an attractive opportunity to deploy capital and return value to our shareholders,” said Chief Executive Officer David Michery.

    The stock soared as much as 88.2% intraday, before paring gains to be up 32.8% in afternoon trading. Trading volume swelled to an already record 1.78 billion shares, compared with the full-day average over the past 30 days of about 205.0 million shares.

    On Wednesday, the stock blasted 69.4% higher, the biggest one-day gain since it ran up 145.6% on Feb. 28, 2022, on then-record volume of 1.39 billion shares. That followed the company’s announcement that it retained a law firm to combat illegal naked short selling.


    FactSet, MarketWatch

    A short sale is a way for investors to bet that prices will fall. The short seller must pay to borrow stock owned by another investor so they can sell it with the hope of buying the stock back at a lower price. If the investor who originally owned the stock sells their stock, the borrower must cover their short so they can return the stock.

    “Naked” short selling refers to the illegal act of shorting a stock without borrowing it first. While that is often blamed for what companies believe are unwarranted declines in their stock, market structure experts have often refuted those claims.

    Read: Short sellers are not evil, but they are misunderstood.

    Before the stock’s two-day bounce, it had closed Monday at a record low of 10.1 cents, even after the company reported last week that it recorded revenue for the first time, and that it received additional financing that put it in the “best financial position” in its history.

    Mullen had said on Wednesday that it “believes it may have been” targeted by naked short sellers, and therefore decided to investigate any “potential wrongdoing.”


    FactSet, MarketWatch

    The latest exchange data showed that the percent of Mullen’s public float, or shares freely available to trade, that have been shorted was 16.2%, according to FactSet data. That’s less than half what the percentage was a month ago.

    In comparison, fellow “meme” stock AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
    AMC,
    +0.94%

    has 23.6% of its float shorted and 20.8% of GameStop Corp.’s
    GME,
    -4.48%

    float is shorted.

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  • AMC shares make biggest gain in nearly three months ahead of stock conversion hearing

    AMC shares make biggest gain in nearly three months ahead of stock conversion hearing

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    AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.’s stock ended Wednesday’s session up 7.6% on the eve of a key hearing in the company’s push to convert its AMC Preferred Equity Units into common stock.

    Shares of AMC
    AMC,
    +7.56%

    had their largest single-day percentage gain since April 6, when they rose 21%. Earlier this week, the stock snapped its longest losing streak in 18 months. The APE
    APE,
    -3.37%

    units ended Wednesday’s session down 3.4%.

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  • Mullen Automotive now a ‘go to’ meme stock, says influential trader

    Mullen Automotive now a ‘go to’ meme stock, says influential trader

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    Mullen Automotive Inc. is attracting more meme-like attention from retail investors than traditional meme stock darlings AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. and GameStop Corp., according to an influential meme-stock trader.

    The electric vehicle company’s stock has become the “meme go to” for retail investors, said the trader, who goes by the name Obi. The trader participates in the WallStreetBets group on Reddit under the user name Major-Access2321.

    Obi, whose Making Easy Money YouTube channel has over 28,000 subscribers, said that Mullen
    MULN,
    -7.98%

    is generating plenty of buzz across social media. “When it comes to meme stock world on Reddit, Twitter and now even Facebook, groups are popping up calling themselves the ‘MULN army’,” he told MarketWatch.

    The trader said that “less and less” people are speaking about AMC Entertainment
    AMC,
    +3.14%

    and GameStop
    GME,
    +2.38%
    .
    “More and more people are speaking about MULN … they call it the meme that makes sense,” he added.

    Mullen shares have seen a dramatic spike in trading volume recently, with average trading volume of 1.1 billion shares Wednesday and 547.8 million shares over the past five days, according to FactSet data. The stock’s 65-day average trading volume is 279 million shares. Mullen ended Wednesday’s session down 21.1% on the company’s announcement of a reverse stock split.

    Related: Mullen Automotive shares plunge on reverse stock split announcement

    AMC’s stock ended Wednesday’s session up 4.4% on trading volume of 25.1 million shares, below its 65-day average trading volume of 35.4 million shares. GameStop’s stock closed up 1.7% Wednesday on trading volume of 3.2 million shares, below its 65-day average of 4.8 million shares.

    The stock was down 18% on Thursday.

    The over outlook for the EV market looks bright, according to Obi. “Retail feel like they have something special here with MULN,” he added.

    On Wednesday Mullen Automotive Inc. announced that it will conduct the 1-for-25 reverse stock split as the electric-vehicle company looks to maintain its Nasdaq listing.

    The stock will continue to trade on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the existing symbol “MULN” and will begin trading on a split-adjusted basis at market open Thursday.

    In March, Mullen announced that the Nasdaq had approved the company’s request for a 180-day extension to meet the $1 minimum-bid-price requirement. On Sept. 7, 2022, the Nasdaq notified the company that its stock was not compliant with rules as it had traded below $1 for more than 30 days.

    Related: After TOP Financial’s surge, influential meme-stock trader looks for next big opportunity

    Mullen’s stock soared last year after Amazon.com Inc.’s
    AMZN,
    +0.34%

    delivery partner placed an order for up to 600 cargo vans, and the company has since teamed up with Rapid Response Defense Systems to supply vans for federal government business.

    In December, Mullen announced that it is partnering with Loop Global Inc. to build public and private EV-charging technology, infrastructure and network solutions. Earlier this year, Mullen joined forces with Qiantu Motors to launch what they called an EV supercar.

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  • Meme stock TOP Financial Group soars more than 890%, spurred on by the Reddit crowd

    Meme stock TOP Financial Group soars more than 890%, spurred on by the Reddit crowd

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    The stock of TOP Financial Group Ltd., a Hong Kong-based broker that went public last year, soared more than 890% Friday to a fresh record high with no apparent news to drive the move.

    Volume of 2.4 million shares traded in the first two hours of trading far exceeded the average daily volume of 872,000 over the last 65 days. The stock TOP was halted for volatility several times in early trade.

    TOP…

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  • Meme stock TOP Financial Group soars more than 890%, spurred on by the Reddit crowd

    Meme stock TOP Financial Group soars more than 890%, spurred on by the Reddit crowd

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    The stock of TOP Financial Group Ltd., a Hong Kong-based broker that went public last year, soared more than 890% Friday to a fresh record high with no apparent news to drive the move.

    Volume of 5.5 million shares traded by early afternoon far exceeded the average daily volume of 872,000 over the last 65 days. The stock TOP was halted for volatility multiple times during the session.

    The…

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  • AMC stock plunges 22% after company agrees to settlement terms, opening up for APE conversion

    AMC stock plunges 22% after company agrees to settlement terms, opening up for APE conversion

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    AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
    AMC,
    +2.00%

    stock dropped nearly 22% in the extended session Monday after the movie-theater operator said in a filing that it has agreed to settlement terms relating to a shareholder litigation around a stock conversion. The terms of the settlement would open the way for AMC’s proposal to convert its AMC Preferred Equity, or APE
    APE,
    +0.68%
    ,
    units into shares of common stock, alongside a 10-to-1 reverse stock split and the capacity to sell more shares, which shareholders supported in mid-March but had faced court proceedings. Shares of AMC ended the regular trading day up 2%. APEs were up around 22% in the extended session. A final settlement is subject to a formal agreement and court approval; terms also include payment to the plaintiffs of about 4.4% of AMC’s stock, or about 6.9 million shares.

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  • AMC, Bed Bath & Beyond stocks get a big lift as ‘meme’ peer GameStop shares soar

    AMC, Bed Bath & Beyond stocks get a big lift as ‘meme’ peer GameStop shares soar

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    Shares of AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
    AMC,
    +3.28%

    and Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.
    BBBY,
    +0.98%

    soared in premarket trading Wednesday, as fellow “meme” stock GameStop Corp.
    GME,
    +4.62%

    skyrocketed after the consumer electronics and video games seller reported a surprise fiscal fourth-quarter profit. Bed Bath’s stock shot up 11.4%, after bouncing 1.0% Tuesday off Monday’s record-low close of 81 cents, but was still headed for a sub-$1 open. AMC’s stock climbed 10.2%, after having tumbled 38.2% month to date through Tuesday. And AMC’s preferred equity units
    APE,
    +8.82%
    ,
    known as APEs, jumped 10.8% ahead of the open, after they rallied 13.8% over the past two sessions, but were still down 28.5% month to date through Tuesday. Meanwhile, GameStop shares ran up 42.8% premarket, putting them on track to open at a 3 1/2-month high.

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  • AMC shareholders approve ‘APE’ conversion in ‘landslide victory’ but stock tumbles

    AMC shareholders approve ‘APE’ conversion in ‘landslide victory’ but stock tumbles

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    Shareholders of AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. voted overwhelmingly in support of the company’s proposal to convert AMC Preferred Equity units into shares of common stock Tuesday.

    AMC’s AMC stock, which was repeatedly halted for volatility Monday, fell 13.8%. APEs APE rose 9.3%.

    In January, AMC announced the special meeting of shareholders…

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  • Why naked short selling has suddenly become a hot topic

    Why naked short selling has suddenly become a hot topic

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    Short selling can be controversial, especially among management teams of companies whose stocks traders are betting that their prices will fall. And a new spike in alleged “naked short selling” among microcap stocks is making several management teams angry enough to threaten legal action:

    Taking a long position means buying a stock and holding it, hoping the price will go up.

    Shorting, or short selling, is when an investor borrows shares and immediately sells them, hoping he or she can buy them again later at a lower price, return them to the lender and pocket the difference.

    Covering is when an investor with a short position buys the stock again to close a short position and return the shares to the lender.

    If you take a long position, you might lose all your money. A stock can go to zero if a company goes bankrupt. But a short position is riskier. If the share price rises steadily after an investor has placed a short trade, the investor is sitting on an unrealized capital loss. This is why short selling traditionally has been dominated by professional investors who base this type of trade on heavy research and conviction.

    Read: Short sellers are not evil, but they are misunderstood

    Brokers require short sellers to qualify for margin accounts. A broker faces credit exposure to an investor if a stock that has been shorted begins to rise instead of going down. Depending on how high the price rises, the broker will demand more collateral from the investor. The investor may eventually have to cover and close the short with a loss, if the stock rises too much.

    And that type of activity can lead to a short squeeze if many short sellers are surprised at the same time. A short squeeze can send a share price through the roof temporarily.

    Short squeezes helped feed the meme-stock craze of 2021 that sent shares of GameStop Corp.
    GME,
    +10.45%

    and AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
    AMC,
    +2.54%

    soaring early in 2021. Some traders communicating through the Reddit WallStreetBets channel and in other social media worked together to try to force short squeezes in stocks of troubled companies that had been heavily shorted. The action sent shares of GameStop soaring from $4.82 at the end of 2020 to a closing high of $86.88 on Jan. 27, 2021, only for the stock to fall to $10.15 on Feb. 19, 2021, as the seesaw action continued for this and other meme stocks.

    Naked shorting

    Let’s say you were convinced that a company was headed toward financial difficulties or even bankruptcy, but its shares were still trading at a value you considered to be significant. If the shares were highly liquid, you would be able to borrow them through your broker for little or almost no cost, to set up your short trade.

    But if many other investors were shorting the stock, there would be fewer shares available for borrowing. Then your broker would charge a higher fee based on supply and demand.

    For example, according to data provided by FactSet on Jan. 23, 22.7% of GameStop’s shares available for trading were sold short — a figure that could be up to two weeks out-of-date, according to the financial data provider.

    According to Brad Lamensdorf, who co-manages the AdvisorShares Ranger Equity Bear ETF
    HDGE,
    -2.65%
    ,
    the cost of borrowing shares of GameStop on Jan. 23 was an annualized 15.5%. That cost increases a short seller’s risk.

    What if you wanted to short a stock that had even heavier short interest than GameStop? Lamensdorf said on Jan. 23 that there were no shares available to borrow for Carvana Co.
    CVNA,
    +10.63%
    ,
    Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.
    BBBY,
    -12.24%
    ,
    Beyond Meat Inc.
    BYND,
    +11.31%

    or Coinbase Global Inc.
    COIN,
    +1.45%
    .
    If you wanted to short AMC shares, you would pay an annual fee of 85.17% to borrow the shares.

    Starting last week, and flowing into this week, management teams at several companies with microcap stocks (with market capitalizations below $100 million) said they were investigating naked short selling — short selling without actually borrowing the shares.

    This brings us to three more terms:

    A short-locate is a service a short seller requests from a broker. The broker finds shares for the short seller to borrow.

    A natural locate is needed to make a “proper” short-sale, according to Moshe Hurwitz, who recently launched Blue Zen Capital Management in Atlanta to specialize in short selling. The broker gives you a price to borrow shares and places the actual shares in your account. You can then short them if you want to.

    A nonnatural locate is “when the broker gives you shares they do not have,” according to Hurwitz.

    When asked if a nonnatural locate would constitute fraud, Hurwitz said “yes.”

    How is naked short selling possible? According to Hurwitz, “it is incumbent on the brokers” to stop placing borrowed shares in customer accounts when supplies of shares are depleted. But he added that some brokers, even in the U.S., lend out the same shares multiple times, because it is lucrative.

    “The reason they do it is when it comes time to settle, to deliver, they are banking on the fact that most of those people are day traders, so there would be enough shares to deliver.”

    Hurwitz cautioned that the current round of complaints about naked short selling wasn’t unusual and even though short selling activity can push a stock’s price down momentarily, “short sellers are buyers in waiting.” They will eventually buy when they cover their short positions.

    “But to really push a stock price down, you need long investors to sell,” he said.

    Different action that can appear to be naked shorting

    Lamensdorf said the illegal naked shorting that Verb Technology Co.
    VERB,
    +69.65%
    ,
    Genius Group Ltd.
    GNS,
    +45.37%

    and other microcap companies have been recently complaining about might include activity that isn’t illegal.

    An investor looking to short a stock for which shares weren’t available to borrow, or for which the cost to borrow shares was too high, might enter into “swap transactions or sophisticated over-the-counter derivative transactions,” to bet against the stock,” he said.

    This type of trader would be “pretty sophisticated,” Lamensdorf said. He added that brokers typically have account minimums ranging from $25 million to $50 million for investors making this type of trade. This would mean the trader was likely to be “a decent-sized family office or a fund, with decent liquidity,” he said.

    Don’t miss: This dividend-stock ETF has a 12% yield and is beating the S&P 500 by a substantial amount

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  • Many investors are betting on an inflation peak. Here’s why a former hedge-fund manager says they’re wrong.

    Many investors are betting on an inflation peak. Here’s why a former hedge-fund manager says they’re wrong.

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    Investors are waking up to big trouble in big China. Stock futures and oil prices are falling after angry anti-COVID zero protests swept the country.

    “This is a sudden powerful new distraction for markets when this week was supposed to be about incoming U.S. data,” sum up strategists at Saxo Bank. They say watch companies exposed to China, “given forward earnings are likely to be downgraded following further China lockdowns and protests.” 

    Before China grabbed the spotlight, holiday weekend sales, jobs and inflation data that due this week, as well as remarks by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell were the big focus.

    Other questions are now swirling. Will China-related falls in oil prices lend to the peak inflation theory? And what about China’s post-COVID economic rebirth?

    Onto our call of the day, which says it’s time to short long bonds because of sticky food inflation — thanks to China. It comes from Russell Clark, a former hedge-fund manager who has spent the last 20 years focusing on that market, macro and short selling. 

    He notes investors have been scooping up the the iShares 20 years+ Treasury Bond ETF
    TLT,
    -0.34%
    ,
    a liquid exchange-traded fund that buys long-dated bonds, even as with U.S. inflation hovering at 1970 highs.

    “The reason that people are getting bullish bonds I believe is that the yield curve has inverted. And every time that has happened, you have a recession and you want to get out of equities and into bonds,” says Clark. A yield curve inversion occurs when long-term interest rates drop below short term rates. The inversion of 2 and 10-year Treasury yields is at its steepest since the 1980s.

    Clues may lie in Japan’s poorly performing bond market. “Not only has it been prescient in leading the U.S. bond yields lower from 1999 onward, in 2020 the JGB market was also prescient in signaling the future U.S. treasury sell off,” he says.


    Russell Clark

    And what Japan is likely seeing that U.S. investors aren’t right now is China-driven food inflation. That’s something the Fed will find it tough to ignore, he said.

    Since the since the 1980s, food commodity prices have followed raw commodity prices higher, If the Fed wants to work that down, it will raise interest rates. For example, falling natural-gas prices
    NG00,
    -3.37%

    would help ease fertilizer costs for farmers.


    Russell Clark

    Clark points out that China is the world’s biggest food importer, with much higher prices than the U.S.

    “Pork, which is the most consumed meat in China, is now 3 times more expensive than the U.S. market, and has recently doubled in price. As Japan is also a large importer of pork, perhaps this was the reason the JGB market sold off before the U.S.,” he said.

    Beef is also a major import for China, and yes, prices are much higher than that of the U.S.

    “In essence, I am saying that China is exporting food inflation to the rest of the world, and I don’t see that ending at the moment. JGBs seem to agree – and when I look at the index value of US Food CPI on a log basis, I keep thinking that is says interest rates are going higher not lower,” said Clark.

    He sees food inflation looking secular, rather than cyclical, due to the demands of an increasingly urbanized China. “Secular food inflation implies POLITICAL pressure to have higher interest rates. US treasuries look a short to me, just as everyone has gotten long,” he said.

    The markets

    Stock futures
    ES00,
    -0.73%

    YM00,
    -0.54%

    NQ00,
    -0.72%

    are falling, and Treasury yields
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.684%

    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    4.467%

    and oil
    CL.1,
    -3.12%

    also are falling. The Japanese yen
    USDJPY,
    -0.61%

    is seeing some safe-haven bids. The Hong Kong Hang Seng Index
    HSI,
    -1.57%

    closed down 1.5%.

    For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

    The buzz

    An apartment-building fire in a locked-down city that killed 10 appeared to spark protests across China, calling for the President Xi Jinping to step down and zero-COVID policies to stop. A BBC reporter was arrested and beaten. Meanwhile, lockdowns mean China farmers are destroying crops they can’t sell.

    And similar unrest at China’s Zhengzhou Foxconn
    2317,
    -0.50%

    factory is expected to cause a shortfall of 6 million Apple
    AAPL,
    -1.96%

    iPhone Pros this year.

    Pinduoduo shares
    PDD,
    -1.44%

    are soaring after the China-based mobile marketplace reported profit and revenue beats.

    MGM Resorts 
    MGM,
    -0.42%
    ,
    Las Vegas Sands 
    LVS,
    +0.26%

    and Wynn Resorts 
    WYNN,
    -0.57%

    higher in premarket after Macao tentatively renewed their casino licenses.

    Retailers are in focus after Black Friday online sales topped a record $9 billion. That’s as some wonder if Cyber Monday is still a thing.

    St. Louis Fed President James Bullard will sit down for an interview with MarketWatch on Monday, at 12 noon Eastern. New York Fed President John Williams address the Economic Club of New York at the same time. Fed’s Powell will speak on Wednesday, along with several other Fed officials this week.

    A busy data week starts Tuesday with home-price indexes and consumer confidence data. GDP, the PCE price index for October — a favored gauge of the Federal Reserve and November employment data are also on tap this week.

    Best of the web

    ‘I believe the economy is the biggest bubble in world history,’ warns ‘Rich Dad, Poor Dad’s Robert Kiyosaki.

    Iran was calling for the U.S. to be expelled from the Qatar World Cup.

    Lab study shows next COVID strain will be more deadly.

    The tickers

    These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern:

    Ticker

    Security name

    TSLA,
    -0.19%
    Tesla

    GME,
    -1.99%
    GameStop

    AMC,
    -1.70%
    AMC Entertainment

    AAPL,
    -1.96%
    Apple

    COSM,
    +34.06%
    Cosmos Holdings

    AMZN,
    -0.76%
    Amazon.com

    BBBY,
    -2.70%
    Bed Bath & Beyond

    MULN,
    -2.39%
    Mullen Automotive

    APE,
    +0.83%
    AMC Entertainment Holdings preferred shares

    DWAC,
    +6.44%
    Digital World Acquisition Corp.

    Random reads

    Chinese woman on a mission to visit everyone else’s lonely elderly relatives.

    ‘Gaslighting’ is Merriam Webster’s word of the year. No, really.

    Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

    Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton

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