Wendy’s shares WEN surged more than 30% in early trading on Wednesday as retail investors piled into the fast-food chain, overshadowing the company’s latest executive appointment and reviving memories of the meme-stock frenzy.
The rally came after Wendy’s announced the appointment of former Potbelly executive Steven Cirulis as chief financial officer and chief strategy officer.
While management changes can sometimes move stocks, the scale of the gains suggested that retail trading activity was the primary driver.
Heavy buying pushed the burger chain among the most discussed names on social media platforms.
According to data tracked by Swaggy Stocks, Wendy’s ranked as the second-most mentioned stock across Reddit trading forums over the past 24 hours.
Posts on WallStreetBets, the forum that helped propel stocks such as GameStop and AMC Entertainment during the 2021 meme-stock boom, appeared to fuel Wednesday’s surge.
Short squeeze hopes gather momentum
Retail investors have increasingly turned their attention to Wendy’s after the stock lost roughly half of its value over the past year.
Some traders argued that the company offered characteristics lacking in many speculative meme stocks.
They pointed to its profitability, relatively low valuation, and attractive dividend yield as reasons for optimism.
Others focused on the stock’s elevated short interest.
According to ORTEX, short interest in Wendy’s has reached 34% of its free float as of Wednesday.
Data from S3 Partners showed that roughly 23% of the company’s free float was sold short, while overall short interest represented just under 30% of publicly available shares on Wednesday.
Such positioning can create conditions for a short squeeze.
As a stock rises sharply, investors betting against it may be forced to buy shares to close their positions and limit losses.
That buying can drive prices even higher and intensify the rally.
Wednesday’s surge appeared to be triggering precisely that dynamic, with buying activity accelerating as shares climbed.
ORTEX co-founder Peter Hillerberg said in a Reuters report that the stock was primed for a “short squeeze,” but was not in one yet as most short sellers were still near their entry price and not forced to cover their positions due to recent share weakness.
“That only changes if the rally keeps running,” he added.
Weak fundamentals remain a challenge
The enthusiasm comes despite deteriorating business performance.
Wendy’s shares have fallen 49% over the past year as inflation-weary consumers have cut back on restaurant spending.
The company reported a 5.5% decline in global sales during the first quarter, driven largely by weakness at its existing US restaurants.
Same-store sales in the United States fell 7.8%, worsening from a 2.8% decline a year earlier.
Profit margins also came under pressure as lower customer traffic combined with higher food costs weighed on results.
Although the stock appears inexpensive, trading at about 11 times expected earnings for 2026, analysts forecast revenue growth of less than 1% this year.
Nevertheless, social media users have increasingly portrayed Wendy’s as a turnaround and recovery play.
The renewed attention underscores how beaten-down stocks with high short interest can quickly become targets for retail traders searching for the next short-squeeze candidate.
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