GME Bull Faction

The faction of market participants that are bullish on GME and have a financial interest in the price of the stock going up
Summary
  • There exists an ongoing conflict surrounding GME where opposing factions compete over the outcome of the GME market price
  • In very loose terms, these opposing factions can be defined as "Bears" and "Bulls"
  • GME Bulls are market participants that have a position that gains when the share price of GME goes up, for example by owning shares or call options
  • Opposed to GME Bulls are GME Bears, who are market participants that have a position that gains when the share price of GME goes down
  • GME Bulls in general are proponents of a bull thesis
Members of the Bull Faction

The faction of GME bulls includes all market participants that have an investment that gains when the market price of GME goes up.

This therefore includes company insiders, such as Ryan Cohen, retail GME shareholders, especially those that hold shares in DRS, institutions that are net-long on GME, and (disputably) Keith Gill.

Keith Gill is disputable because GME cynics will claim that there is no evidence of his continued interest in GME and may also claim that he probably sold.

Some institutions may have both long and short GME positions and therefore their alignment is less clear.

Investment Cult

Some that are cynical of GME investors sometimes refer to determined long-term GME shareholders as "cultists", or investors in a "cult stock."

This rhetoric is used to disparage and discredit those investors by insinuating that they are not operating with a valid investment thesis, but rather are driven by delusional, conspiratorial beliefs.