(Bloomberg) -- A lawsuit accusing popular stocks influencer Keith Gill, better known as “Roaring Kitty,” of engaging in a “pump and dump” scheme involving GameStop Corp. shares was dropped within days of its filing.Most Read from BloombergDemocrats Weigh Mid-July Vote to Formally Tap Biden as NomineeTrump Immunity Ruling Means Any Trial Before Election Unlikely‘Upflation’ Is the Latest Retail Trend Driving Up Prices for US ConsumersBeryl Becomes Earliest Ever Category 5 Hurricane in AtlanticTrum
美股在2024年下半年首個交易日反覆上升,三大指數高開後曾倒跌,科技股帶領之下,納斯達克指數收市升近150點,創歷史新高,蘋果亦破頂。債市顯著下跌,10年期國債息率升近14點子。美國製造業繼續萎縮,特朗普的選情繼續上漲,投資者正在調整經濟前景預測,包括通脹重燃的可能。另一方面,歐洲央行行長拉加德嘗試降低減息預期。
Chewy shares were falling Monday after investor Keith Gill, better known as Roaring Kitty, disclosed a 6.6% stake in the pet-supplies retailer founded by GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen. It had climbed as much as 18% in the premarket session after Gill disclosed in a Monday filing that he owned nine million shares of the company. Gill is known for helping to spark the frenzy back in 2021 with bullish posts under the handle Roaring Kitty about the videogame retailer GameStop Cohen, Chewy’s founder, is also known for his roles as GameStop’s CEO and an investor in Bed Bath & Beyond.