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GameStop stock (GME) rose more than 60% on Tuesday, adding to a rally that sent shares of the video game retailer up 74% Monday.

Monday’s move, in which the stock rose as much as 110% and was halted for volatility several times during the trading session, followed the reemergence of Keith Gill, also known as “Roaring Kitty,” whose bull case on GameStop ignited the meme stock rally back in 2021.

GameStop shares had been flat year to date ahead of Monday’s rally but had risen about 60% in the past month. GameStop stock is now up over 180% over the last month, not including Tuesday’s premarket gains.

The recent gains in GameStop were also accompanied by a rally in theater chain operator AMC (AMC).

On Tuesday, AMC stock rose more than 100% before paring gains. In an SEC filing, AMC also disclosed it issued approximately 72.5 million new shares, raising some $250 million for the company in the process.

Other heavily shorted stocks rallying in premarket trade on Tuesday included SunPower (SPWR), up 90%; Beyond Meat (BYND), up 25%, and The Children’s Place (PLCE), up around 6%.

In a note to clients on Tuesday, Nicholas Colas, co-founder at DataTrek Research, wrote this recent trading action “feels like an echo of early 2021, when this account helped fuel a vicious short squeeze in GameStop.”

Colas noted that the move back in 2021 was quite a bit larger than what we’ve seen so far this time around, with GameStop stock rising 1,500% in January 2021 before forfeiting most of those gains.

The pain short sellers endured during the original meme stock rally three years ago hasn’t deterred bets against these companies, however. Short interest in GameStop has remained elevated since that meme rally, data from S3 Partners showed, with 24% of the float sold short as of Monday.

Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director of S3 Partners, told Yahoo Finance on Monday that GameStop shorts were down over $1.3 billion in month-to-date losses in May following Monday’s rally.

Tuesday’s early spike will add to this tally.

In Colas’s view, a trader short a stock rallying with this kind of aggression is left with only one option: “Your only choice is to close out the position regardless of the price.”

“In the case of GME, you are also afraid that retail traders will be enticed into a replay of 2021,” Colas added.

A screen displays the logo and trading information for GameStop on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., March 29, 2022.  REUTERS/Brendan McDermidA screen displays the logo and trading information for GameStop on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., March 29, 2022.  REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

A screen displays the logo and trading information for GameStop on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., March 29, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid (REUTERS / Reuters)

The meme frenzy three years ago garnered national attention, attracting an army of retail traders during the pandemic lockdowns.

“I don’t look at this at all like I did in 2021 when it was almost a transformational moment, dragging, you know, tens of millions of people back into the marketplace,” said Tom Sosnoff, CEO of tastylive, an options and futures trading platform.

Still, YouTuber Matt Kohrs, who has held positions in GameStop and AMC in the past, says the pivotal aspect of “the little guy versus the big guy” during the short squeezes of 2021 still holds true in today’s rally.

“The perception is that the entire system is set up and insulated to benefit the powerful elite. GME is the symbol of the populist movement against that concept,” said Kohrs.

“The only true change I see from a psychology standpoint is not being locked inside anymore,” he added.

Ines Ferre is a senior business reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter at @ines_ferre.

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