Business

Australian stock surges after being mistaken for GameStop

GME Resources Ltd was trading up 19% near the end of trade

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 28 Jan 2021 4:30PM

Australian stock surges after being mistaken for GameStop
Trading in the little-known Australian mining firm GME Resources Limited beat the country’s top listed firms as investors apparently mistook it for US stocks GameStop due to their similar ticker. – Pixabay pic, January 28, 2021

SYDNEY – A little-known Australian mining company saw its share price soar as much as 50% today, after investors appeared to mistake it for the similarly named cult US stock GameStop. 

GME Resources Limited – listed as “GME” on the Australian Securities Exchange – surged in early trading, with the market taking an unexpected interest in the tiny Western Australia-based nickel miner. 

Trading volume in the company was at more than 20 times the normal average, leading some to believe that GME had been mistaken for GameStop, which has the ticker “GME” on the New York Stock Exchange. 

GameStop, a struggling US video game retailer, has seen its stock surge about 1,000% in two weeks after a group of amateur investors active on the online forum Reddit banded together to fight the Wall Street funds that had pushed its price lower. 

“When I opened my share tracking app and saw it was at 9.4 cents, I was stunned,” GME’s managing director Peter Sullivan told the Sydney Morning Herald. 

“It just went bang, and I thought, ‘well, what's going on here’? Is there something about my own company that I don't know?”

The company’s management had no idea what was happening until a younger family member explained. 

“There were emails and text messages from people flying around, and eventually my brother’s son, who works in Sydney, told us it was about speculation to do with the ticker GME.” 

Close to the end of trade, the Australian company was still trading up 19% for the day, beating the country’s top listed firms, which were down more than 2%. – AFP, January 28, 2021

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