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Nail polish maker Revlon Inc continued its surge as the latest so-called meme stock riding a wave of retail investor interest as the stock gained more than 50 per cent in heavy trading on Wednesday.

Shares of the $330 million market-cap company, which filed for bankruptcy last Wednesday, are up more than 400 per cent since its lows on June 14 as retail investors appear to pile in to the company.

Overall, shares of Revlon were the second-most traded by brokerage customers of Fidelity on Wednesday, following only the shares of Tesla Inc, according to the firm.

The firm’s market cap was less than $100 million before its recent surge, one of the features that made it the “perfect candidate for the most speculative retail cohort,” according to Vanda Research. Retail traders bought $8.3 million worth of Revlon shares on Tuesday, the highest ever recorded for the stock, Vanda said.

In late afternoon trading on Wednesday, the stock was up 48 per cent at $8.98 after rising more than 50 per cent earlier.

The rally was reminiscent of the more than 500 per cent surge in the shares of car rental firm Hertz Corp after it filed for bankruptcy in May 2020 following economic restrictions during the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic.

Vanda estimated that short interest in Revlon stood at 37.6 per cent earlier this week, making it an attractive target for retail traders who have in the past piled in to stocks in order to force a short squeeze – an unwind of bearish bets that occurs when a stock price rapidly rises and can exacerbate gains in a company’s shares.

However, such an unwind is likely not the driver of Revlon’s recent move higher, said Ihor Dusaniwsky, managing director at research firm S3 Partners.

“The recent price moves are due to long buying and selling and not short selling and covering – in other words, a meme stock,” he said.

Short sellers are down $15.3 million in mark-to-market losses, or 139 per cent, for the month of June, according to S3 Partners.

Shares of Revlon are down 22 per cent for the year to date.

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