What a great writeup. Redditors should come and read it.
Thank you for bringing this up to me! If only there could be someone to write some form of script or program to find links of products GameStop sells that are cheaper on Amazon and then generate a list that could be sent to GameStop to price match…
My biggest question is: do we even need SuperSus, r/GME, or even Lemmy? Does the future of those online communities impact the stock, MOASS or the company, at all? Would people sell without those hubs? Do they still hold because they read the DD or do they do it because of the hype?
If the community turns out to be in any way important, then I do very much care about them. If they will not have any effect on MOASS, I couldn’t care less.
Worth a watch.
No, it isn’t. You know what is worth a watch? Jim Cramer’s clip explaining market manipulation and the wikipedia article for “guerrilla communication”. That’s worth a watch.
Was there any comment from the site owner hinting at “wall street throwing a wrench into that”?
I frequently got into frustrating arguments with that shitstain. Crybad doesn’t care how reasonable and well argued your stance is. He just says “brigading” and nukes your DD. When MOASS happens, I will search and find this person…
Adam Aaron keeps diluting, because AMC needs money to pay off debt. Ryan Cohen doesn’t need to dilute, since GameStop has no real debt. But he still does it because he’s planning on doing something with the money. And considering the amount of it, it is something very big.
People don’t seem to understand that “dilution” is a negative term, designed for you to immediately disapprove of it. They aren’t just diluting though, they are actually “raising capital”. The truth is, that the value of your shares may decrease, but the “lost value” isn’t lost. It transforms into a different value, on the portfolio of GME. RC has proven, that he is interested in generating value for shareholders. He also firmly believes in delayed gratification. While the capital he raises goes into building a strong company, the capital that Adam raises goes straight to the banks, paying interest for AMC’s debt.