Prepare yourself for the ultimate exposé of the retail trading revolution.
The sea shanties, YOLOs, and red bandanas were just the beginning. Did you know Robinhood didnt actually initiate the infamous trading halt? Or why Redditors refer to 2021 as the sneeze rather than the squeeze? And what if I told you that some shares in your brokerage account might be counterfeits? If not, buckle up.
Witness firsthand the real and utterly ludicrous hivemind that brought Wall Street to its knees in January 2021, and discover why GameStop was only the beginning of an even more unprecedented retail contagionone that will challenge everything you think you know about our markets all over again.
If the meme mania of 2021 drew blood from Wall Street, what follows is the Shakespearean realization that Reddits blade was, in fact, poisoned. In a digital world where information is frequently deleted, revised, and buried, accurately piecing together events is nearly impossible. While other authors and journalists have understandably struggled, Rob Smat offers a clear and unfiltered account, having witnessed every twist of the GameStop phenomenon firsthand.
Power to the Players is as much an unabridged history of the GameStop sneeze as it is a roadmap of how retail traders regrouped when everyone else thought the story had ended in calamity. The truest of diamond hands never sold, and their power has only grown stronger since. Before, Redditors were merely a nuisance to the status quo. Now, theyre poised to upend it completely.
The sea shanties, YOLOs, and red bandanas were just the beginning. Authors, journalists, and filmmakers have all attempted to tell stories about dumb money or a revolution that wasnt, but every rendition has fallen short of the truth.
Witness firsthand the real and utterly ludicrous hive-mind that brought Wall Street to its knees in January 2021, and find out why GameStop was only the beginning of an even more unprecedented retail contagion, one which will challenge everything you think you know about our markets (all over again).
In a digital world of frequently deleted, revised, and buried information, accurately piecing together events as they occurred is nearly impossible.
While other media may have succeeded in secondary recaps of the GameStop phenomenon, author Rob Smat delves into the primary source material, having lived it himself.
Most importantly of all, find out why the GameStop phenomenon isnt some pandemic-era fad, but instead a very real and continuing battle with billions of dollars still hanging in the balance.