Why Beyond Meat stock is up about 600% in 3 days

Beyond Meat (BYND) is having another meme stock moment, despite the fundamentals of its business being anything one could call as sizzling as a plant-based burger right off the grill.

Shares of the struggling faux meat maker have gained close to 600% in the past three trading sessions. Gains look poised to continue on Wednesday, with shares up 133% in pre-market trading.

During the stretch, the company’s ticker page has been among the most active on the Yahoo Finance platform (also see Yahoo Finance community insight chart below).

There appears to be two catalysts behind the surge.

On Tuesday, Beyond Meat said its “Beyond Burger 6-pack” and Beyond Chicken Pieces” will be available at 2,000 Walmart (WMT) stores across the country.

And two, on Monday the stock was added to the Roundhill Meme Stock ETF (MEME).

Beyond Meat is seeing increased interest from the Yahoo Finance community.
Beyond Meat is seeing increased interest from the Yahoo Finance community. · Yahoo Finance

The trading activity comes at a tumultuous time for the former IPO high-flier that was once valued at $14 billion after a 2019 IPO (today $1.4 billion).

Last week the company announced a debt swap deal in a bid to slash some $800 million in debt. Beyond Meat will receive $202.5 million in debt due in 2030 in exchange for debt maturing in 2027. The company will issue bondholders up to 326 million shares, diluting existing shareholders.

Second quarter sales crashed 19.6% from the prior year to $75 million, led by a plunge in volume. The company was again hit by a perfect storm: weak demand at retail locations and soft demand at fast food joints. Beyond Meat’s operating loss tallied $34.9 million.

The company opted to layoff 6% of its workforce. It had two rounds of layoffs in 2024 amid poor results.

“Stabilizing the portfolio and driving operating leverage are the key drivers to reaching positive EBITDA in 2H26. The company is shrinking to survive — cutting costs, revisiting strategy, and trying to rebuild distribution. Innovation is shifting toward protein, fiber, and clean forward labels/offerings. The balance sheet needs work. Progress will be judged quarter by quarter,” said Jefferies analyst Kaumil Gajrawala.

Brian Sozzi is Yahoo Finance’s Executive Editor and a member of Yahoo Finance’s editorial leadership team. Follow Sozzi on X @BrianSozzi, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Tips on stories? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com.

Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices

Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance



Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Hamas Has Calculated It Can Survive in Gaza—And Rule

Hamas is pushing for a postwar governance role in negotiations with Arab mediators. That stance is at odds with President Trump’s 20-point peace plan, which calls for the U.S.-designated terrorist group to give up power “in any form.” Hamas has probed Israeli defenses prompting Israeli airstrikes in response and raising worries about the fragility of

EU sanctions 3 Indian firms for suspected links with Russian military - World News

EU sanctions 3 Indian firms for suspected links with Russian military – World News

The European Union (EU) has imposed sanctions on three India-based companies, along with 44 others from different countries, for their suspected connections with Russia’s military. These measures are part of the EU’s 19th round of sanctions aimed at putting more economic pressure on Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine. Indian officials have not yet commented

An X-ray poker table in an image from defendant Robert Stroud's iCloud account.

Tech in rigged poker linked to the mob and the NBA

Card-reading contact lenses, X-ray poker tables, trays of poker chips that read cards, hacked shuffling machines that predict hands. The technology alleged to have been used to execute a multistate, rigged poker operation sounds like it’s straight out of Hollywood. And those were only some of the gadgets that authorities say were used to swindle