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5 Divident Stocks T0 Own Forever
Meme Stocks & Joke Cryptocurrencies: Does Money Have No Value Anymore? Lombardi Letter 2021-11-17 17:51:21 meme stocks meme stock stocks cryptocurrencies cryptocurrency Dogecoin Squid coin GameStop Investors have been bidding up the prices of things that have no real value. The prices of assets like meme stocks and meme cryptocurrencies have surged. What’s next, and what does it say about the value of money? Cryptocurrencies,Stock Market https://www.lombardiletter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/analyzing-charts-and-quotes-2021-09-02-07-59-26-utc-150x150.jpg

Meme Stocks & Joke Cryptocurrencies: Does Money Have No Value Anymore?

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meme stocks

Meme Cryptocurrencies, Meme Stocks, & More

Over the past year or so, if you’ve been following the financial news even slightly, it’s likely you’ve heard about extraordinary returns in certain places. Headlines have been filled with meme stocks, meme cryptocurrencies, “WallStreetBets,” and the list goes on.

Investors have been buying things that don’t have much real value and have been taking their prices much higher. The returns have been astronomical, to say the least.

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5 Divident Stocks T0 Own Forever

Take a look at the price chart of famed cryptocurrency Dogecoin from early 2021, for example. At the beginning of the year, Dogecoin traded for $0.005. By early May, it was trading as high as $0.73. This represents an increase of more than 14,000% in the matter of a few months! Keep in mind that, over the long term, index funds make average gains of about eight percent to 10% a year.

Mind you, this cryptocurrency was created as a joke, and now it’s worth $34.0 billion in total. At its peak in early 2021, Dogecoin was worth more than $70.0 billion.

Dogecoin chart

Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com

Squid Game Coin Soars 233,233%+ in a Week

Dogecoin isn’t the only cryptocurrency that has surged recently.

You may have heard of a show on “Netflix” called Squid Game. The South Korean survival drama is one of the biggest hits on Netflix so far. The popularity of the show inspired the creation of a cryptocurrency called Squid Game coin, or SQUID for short.

Guess what? There was a rush to buy Squid Game coins. On October 26, SQUID was trading around $0.015. By October 31, it was trading around $35.00. This represents an increase of 233,233%. But it didn’t stop there. By November 1, this coin traded as high as $2,860! (Source: “Squid Game,” CoinMarketCap, last accessed November 8, 2021.)

A few days later, it became evident that Squid Game coin was a scam. The creators of the cryptocurrency had cashed out and abandoned it. Now, Squid Game coin trades at $0.34. Had you bought it at $0.015, you’d still be up by more than 2,000%!

Who Can Forget the Best Meme Stock, GameStop?

While Dogecoin and Squid Game coin are just two of many examples of what’s been happening in the cryptocurrency market, who can forget good ol’ GameStop Corp. (NYSE:GME), an ailing video game store that started getting attention from investors last year.

Stocks like GME stock were dubbed “meme stocks.” They became favorite stock picks of a “Reddit” group called “WallStreetBets.”

GameStop stock went from just below $5.00 in June 2020 to as high as $483.00 in early 2021. This represents an increase of more than 9,500% in a matter of a few months.

Look at the chart below. If investors bought GME stock in June 2020 and still held it now, they’d be up by more than 5,000%.

GameStop chart

Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com

3 Critical Questions Investors Must Ask Now

Dear reader, given what’s been happening over the past year or so—investors bidding up the prices of assets that don’t have much real value—I have a few questions.

No one else seems to be asking these questions. It’s worrisome, to say the least.

  1. If investors are buying meme cryptocurrencies like Dogecoin and meme stocks like GameStop stock, do they see no value in the money they hold? Has the perceived value of money gone down so much that investors are willing to bet on assets that were created as a joke?
  2. What does this behavior tell us about risk? Does it say we live in an investing environment where investors are willing to take extreme risks?
  3. In the short term, asset prices fluctuate based on noise and emotion, but eventually, fundamentals matter. What happens then? Could a lot of investors get caught in the middle and face severe losses? If that happens, will it have an impact on the overall financial market?

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