Retail investors talked up five hot stocks this week (Feb. 16 to Feb. 20) on X and Reddit's r/WallStreetBets, driven by retail hype, earnings, AI buzz, and corporate news flow.
Super Micro Computer Inc. (NASDAQ:SMCI), Hims & Hers Health Inc.(NYSE:HIMS), Blue Owl Capital Inc.(NYSE:OWL), Microsoft Corp.(NASDAQ:MSFT), and Walmart Inc.(NASDAQ:WMT), spanning software, semiconductors, e-commerce, retail, private credit, AI, and cloud, reflected diverse investor interests.
Super Micro Computer
SMCI saw a strong rebound in stock price during the week, driven by lingering momentum from its early-February blowout second-quarter earnings, which featured $12.68 billion in revenue and an upgraded full-year revenue guidance to at least $40 billion. A Fortune report on Feb 20 highlighted ongoing delays in hiring a permanent CFO (promised 14 months prior), but overall trader and analyst chatter focused on renewed AI enthusiasm.
Some retail investors were so bullish on SMCI that they were jokingly contemplating betting all of their portfolio’s money on the stock for next few months.
Source: Reddit
The stock had a 52-week range of $27.60 to $62.47, trading around $32 to $35 per share, as of the publication of this article. It fell 45.74% over the year and 24.52% over the last six months.
SMCI had a weaker price trend in the long, short and medium terms, with a strong growth ranking, as per Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings.
Hims & Hers Health
HIMS announced a major acquisition this week, entering a definitive agreement to acquire Australian-based digital health leader Eucalyptus in a deal valued at up to $1.15 billion, with ~$240 million in upfront cash, deferred payments, and earnouts tied to performance through early 2029. The move accelerates Hims & Hers’ international expansion, adding Eucalyptus’ strong presence in Australia, the UK, and Germany—plus emerging operations in Japan and Canada—while projecting $450 million in additional annualized revenue at triple-digit growth rates. –
Fed retail investors believed that HIMS could break above the $20 mark.
Source: Reddit
The stock had a 52-week range of $15.46 to $70.43, trading around $15 to $16 per share, as of the publication of this article. It declined by 76.18% over the year and 63.53% in the last six months.
HIMS had a weaker price trend in the short, medium, and long term, with a poor value ranking as per Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings.
Blue Owl Capital
OWL faced significant market pressure during this week, primarily from its announcement of a $1.4 billion sale of direct-lending assets across three BDCs—including $600 million from retail-focused Blue Owl Capital Corp II (OBDC II)—to institutional buyers like CalPERS, OMERS, BCI, and insurer Kuvare. Additionally, initial reports of permanently halting redemptions/liquidity in OBDC II sparked fears of illiquidity cracks in private credit, driving OWL shares down sharply.
Retail investors also perceived the withdrawal limit as concerning.
Source: Reddit
The stock had a 52-week range of $10.88 to $23.98, trading around $11 to $13 per share, as of the publication of this article. It declined 49.87% over the year and 37.64% in the last six months.
Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings showed that OWL had a weaker price trend in the short, medium, and long terms, with a solid growth score.
Microsoft
MSFT experienced continued downward pressure on its stock during the week, amid ongoing investor concerns over heavy AI-related capital expenditures, potential free cash flow sustainability risks, and a slight Azure growth deceleration post its late-January earnings beat. A positive highlight came on Feb 18 when director John W. Stantonpurchased 5,000 shares in the open market, signaling insider confidence amid the sell-off. Discussions also touched on the extended OpenAI revenue-sharing deal, about 20% through 2032, reinforcing long-term AI upside. –
Retail sentiment was seen turning sour on MSFT.
Source: Reddit
The stock had a 52-week range of $344.79 to $555.45, trading around $398 to $400 per share, as of the publication of this article. It was up down 4.25% over the year and 21.21% over the last six months.
MSFT maintains a weaker price trend over the long, short, and medium terms, with a solid quality score, as per Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings.
Walmart
WMT delivered its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings on Feb. 19. The retailer reported strong holiday-quarter results with revenue of $190.66 billion, adjusted EPS of $0.74, U.S. same-store sales rising 4.6%, and online sales surging 27% for its 15th straight quarter of double-digit e-commerce growth—driven by lower prices, speedy delivery, grocery dominance, advertising gains, and third-party marketplace strength. However, the outlook disappointed: 2027 net sales guidance of 3.5–4.5% growth and adjusted EPS of $2.75–$2.85 fell short of Wall Street’s ~5% sales and $2.96 EPS expectations.
Some retail investors believed that WMT’s decline would lead the rotation back into tech stocks.
Source: Reddit
The stock had a 52-week range of $79.85 to $134.69, trading around $124 to $125 per share, as of the publication of this article. It returned 28.45% over the year and 28.45% over the last six months.
According to Benzinga's Edge Stock Rankings, WMT was maintaining a stronger price trend over short, medium, and long terms, with a solid quality ranking.
Retail focus blended meme-driven narrative with earnings outlook and corporate news flow, as the S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq witnessed negative market action during the week.
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