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# What is a meme stock?

> A meme stock is a name that moves on attention more than fundamentals. Here is what actually defines one, how to spot it in the signals, and why the loudest name on the board is so often the riskiest.

By Maya Koeva · 2026-07-07

![A glossy rocket emoji balloon inflated far bigger than the small company behind it, illustrating attention outrunning fundamentals.](/learn/what-is-a-meme-stock.png)

A meme stock is a name where the story on social media has taken over from the business
underneath it. The price moves on attention, momentum, and community, sometimes far past
anything the fundamentals would justify. If you spend any time watching
[mention volume](/learn/what-is-a-stock-signal), meme stocks are the ones that go from
silent to deafening overnight.

## What defines one

A meme stock usually has a few things in common: a sudden explosion in mentions, a crowd
that talks in rockets and rallying cries more than numbers, heavy short interest that fuels
a [squeeze](/learn/what-is-a-short-squeeze) narrative, and a price that detaches from the
company's actual results. The defining trait is not the company, it is the *reason* people
are buying: because it is going up and everyone is watching, not because of a thesis you
could write down.

## How they behave

Meme stocks move in violent, fast arcs. A name can double on a wave of hype and give it all
back a week later, because attention is the fuel and attention is fickle. The move up is
often driven by momentum and fear of missing out; the move down comes when the crowd's
focus jumps to the next name. This is the classic shape of a
[pump](/learn/how-to-spot-a-pump-and-dump), even when nobody is running it on purpose.

## What the signal sees

Here is where reading the conversation helps. A meme stock is loud, but the loudness usually
comes from accounts with low [credibility](/learn/what-is-a-credibility-score): fresh
handles, anonymous hype, voices with no [track record](/learn/how-a-track-record-is-graded)
of being right. The [volume spikes](/learn/volume-vs-signal), but the credible read behind
it stays thin. That gap, huge attention sitting on weak credibility, is the tell that you
are looking at a meme move rather than a real one.

## Not every loud name is a meme

Be careful with the label. Sometimes a name gets loud because something real happened: a
genuine catalyst, credible accounts leaning in, a thesis you can name. The difference is not
the volume, it is who is driving it and why. A loud name backed by credible voices and a
concrete [catalyst](/learn/what-is-a-catalyst) is a signal. A loud name backed by anonymous
excitement and a squeeze dream is a meme. Same noise level, opposite meaning.

## How to not get played

If you are going to touch a meme stock, do it with your eyes open. Know that you are trading
attention, not value, that the exit can vanish faster than the entry appeared, and that
being early and being right are very different things. The safest move is usually to
[filter the noise](/learn/how-to-use-social-signals-without-getting-played): check who is
actually talking, whether they have ever been right, and whether there is a real event
underneath, before the fear of missing out makes the decision for you.

## The bottom line

A meme stock runs on attention. That can make it move fast in both directions, and it makes
the crowd's size a terrible measure of whether it is worth owning. Loud tells you where the
attention is. Credible tells you whether any of it is worth respecting.

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*Quantral surfaces signals and context from public sources to support your own research.
Nothing here is financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell.*
