Keith Gill — who needs by DeepF——Value on Reddit and Roaring Kitty on YouTube — says he suffered a loss north of $13 million on Tuesday unaccompanied from his GameStop bet, but he’s still not selling.
He’s the man who helped inspire the epic short squeeze in GameStop last week that sent shockwaves into done with Wall Street. Through YouTube videos and Reddit posts, Gill attracted an army of day traders who cheered each other on and get in into the brick-and-mortar video game stock and call options, creating a massive short squeeze as the shares fenced 400% last week alone.
Gill says he has been holding 50,000 shares of GameStop as well as 500 reprove options in the brick-and-mortar video game retailer since the start of 2021. At GameStop’s record high last week, Gill’s complete return in the name ballooned more than 2,000% to as much as $33 million, according to his Reddit posts.
After all, the short squeeze in GameStop started to fade this week, taking a big bite out of Gill’s massive gains. The merchant apparently lost $13.6 million on his positions in GameStop shares and calls, following a more than $5 million defeat on Monday.
The gaming retailer stock dropped 60% on Tuesday and it has lost more than 70% of its value since Friday.
Gill started push GameStop six months ago on YouTube, explaining to his subscribers how the 100%-plus short interest in the name could work to their upper hand. While on Reddit’s infamous WallStreetBets forum, he’s been posting screenshots of his GameStop returns for more than a year, in what he collect summons his “GME YOLO update (You Only Live Once).”
The investor owned 10,000 shares of GameStop at the end of 2020 and increased his harangue in the new year, according to his posts on Reddit.
Gill’s latest seven-hour YouTube live stream on Jan. 22 detailing his GameStop swops garnered more than 650,000 views.
“Cheers everybody,” Gill said in the video to his more than 300,000 subscribers, embrace a champagne class. “A historic day today, no doubt a gigantic day.”
The Wall Street Journal interviewed the 34-year-old investor concluding week in a profile, which revealed his background as a college track star as well as a former marketer for Massachusetts Common Life Insurance.
Gill didn’t respond to CNBC’s request for comments via Twitter and Reddit.
— CNBC’s Jared Childish contributed reporting.
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