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The day trader who’s trying to engineer a GameStop-like rally in a fake meat stock
Beyond Meat has seen a sudden, meme-like rally in the last week.
A retail investor who’s amassed a huge trove of the stock tells us why he’s so bullish.
Dimitri Semenikhin looks like he’s trying to do for Beyond Meat what Keith Gill did for GameStop.
An ailing stock that hit a fresh all-time low suddenly surges on a burst of retail-investor enthusiasm despite high short interest from hedge funds — does that sound familiar?
It should if you’ve been even casually following the meme stock saga since the early days of the pandemic. Except this week, instead of GameStop, we’re talking about plant-based meat maker Beyond Meat, and instead of Keith Gill (aka Roaring Kitty), we’re talking about a trader named Dimitri Semenikhin.
The conditions surrounding Beyond Meat’s recent stock rally are remarkably similar to the now-iconic Gamestop short squeeze of 2021 when Roaring Kitty inspired a retail investor army to pump GameStop shares to the moon. In addition to focus from retail, the stock has also been heavily shorted by institutions, with short interest above 50% as of last week.
Now, it looks like Semenikhin, who is based in Dubai, is trying to inspire a similar winning streak for the struggling faux meat company.
For now, it appears to be working. The stock surged 128% on Monday to close at $1.47 a share, exiting penny-stock territory after crumbling to $0.50 last week.
Posting on Reddit, Semenikhin said last week that he had purchased about one twentieth of the shares oustanding. He further unpacked his bullish thesis in a video on Sunday night titled “Why I’ve purchased 4% of Beyond Meat Stock.”
“Beyond sold shares to new investors for near $3 per share and used the money to repay its debt. This move was bullish for Beyond, removing its previously high risk of bankruptcy and greatly strengthening its balance sheet,” his video explained.
Business Insider caught up with Semenikhin to hear about his bullish thesis on the stock.
Like Keith Gill, Semenikhin goes by an animal-themed moniker. He posts on Reddit and YouTube under the name Capybara Stocks.
Semenikhin, who works as a real estate developer, said that his investment strategy centers on identifying companies with low share prices and high financial warrants and debt.
While Semenikhin’s initial post has been removed by Reddit, Business Insider verified his position through screenshots of his brokerage account, confirming that he purchaed 3.1 million shares on October 14, when the stock closed at $0.78 a share.