Retail investors on X and Reddit's r/WallStreetBets had no shortage of material to debate this week, with five stocks capturing the collective imagination between December 8 and December 12. The lineup spanning semiconductors, cloud computing, streaming entertainment, and automotive retail reflected the eclectic interests driving social media buzz: Broadcom Inc. (AVGO), Oracle Corp. (ORCL), Netflix Inc. (NFLX), Carvana Co. (CVNA), and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT).
What made these stocks pop? A mix of earnings releases, AI hype, blockbuster corporate deals, and good old-fashioned market drama. Here's what got everyone talking.
Broadcom: When Great Numbers Aren't Enough
Broadcom (AVGO) dominated headlines on December 11 with its fiscal fourth quarter earnings release, and on paper, the numbers looked spectacular. The semiconductor giant reported record revenue of $18 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $1.95, easily beating analyst estimates. AI revenue grew 74% year-over-year to $6.5 billion, and the company's custom chips and networking backlog hit an eye-popping $73 billion for the next 18 months.
So naturally, the stock fell. Welcome to the stock market, where good news isn't always good enough.
The problem? Investors fixated on guidance that showed shrinking gross margins and a sharply higher tax rate for fiscal 2026. When you're trading at the valuations Broadcom commands, future margin compression tends to overshadow even the most impressive current performance. Some retail investors flagged the company's valuation as a key reason for the sell-off, pointing out that profitability hurdles ahead made the current price hard to justify.
As of publication, Broadcom was trading around $388 to $407 per share, with a 52-week range of $138.10 to $414.61. The stock remained up 75.17% year-to-date and 124.94% over the past year—still a remarkable performance even with the post-earnings stumble. The stock showed a stronger price trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes, though it carried a poor value ranking.
Oracle: Larry Ellison's Chip Neutrality Play
Oracle Corp. (ORCL) reported fiscal second quarter 2026 earnings on December 10, and the headline number was hard to miss: remaining performance obligations surged 438% to $523 billion. That's not a typo. The backlog explosion came courtesy of AI demand from heavyweight clients like OpenAI and Meta Platforms Inc. (META).
Total revenue came in at $16.1 billion with cloud revenues hitting $8.0 billion. But the real story was what Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison said about Oracle's procurement strategy. The company will purchase chips from any producer, he explained, dubbing the approach "chip neutrality." It's a pragmatic stance in an environment where securing enough computing power to meet AI demand has become a competitive advantage in itself.
To fulfill that massive backlog, Oracle forecasted a $15 billion increase in capital expenditures for fiscal 2026, with an additional $4 billion in sales expected by fiscal 2027 as the company converts backlog faster. Some retail investors remained bullish on the stock after the earnings release, seeing the capital spending as an investment in capturing the AI wave rather than a red flag.
The stock was trading around $197 to $200 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $118.86 to $345.72. Oracle was up 19.77% year-to-date and 13.42% over the past year. The stock demonstrated a stronger price trend across all timeframes with a solid quality ranking.
Netflix: Hollywood's Biggest Acquisition Drama
Netflix Inc. (NFLX) decided to shake up Hollywood on December 5 by announcing an $82.7 billion acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery Inc. (WBD)'s studios and streaming assets. The streaming giant positioned the deal as a way to bolster its content firepower amid intensifying streaming wars, with management projecting $2-3 billion in initial synergies.
But the announcement sparked immediate backlash over regulatory hurdles, debt load, and integration risks. Then things got really interesting. By December 8, Paramount Skydance Corp. (PSKY) threw down a hostile $108 billion counterbid. By December 9, a shareholder lawsuit had been filed against Netflix. It was peak corporate drama, and retail investors ate it up.
Interestingly, many retail investors remained bullish on Netflix regardless of the bidding war complications. The prevailing sentiment seemed to be that whether this particular deal closed or not, Netflix was making the right strategic moves to consolidate the streaming landscape.
The stock was trading around $94 to $97 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $82.11 to $134.12. Netflix was up 6.11% year-to-date and 1.65% over the past year. The stock showed a weaker price trend across short, medium, and long-term periods, though it maintained a solid quality ranking.
Carvana: The S&P 500's Controversial New Member
Carvana Co. (CVNA) dominated headlines with its S&P 500 inclusion announced on December 5, effective December 22. The news sparked an explosive rally in the online car dealer's stock. The Federal Reserve's decision to cut rates by 25 basis points on Wednesday provided additional fuel to the rally.
But not everyone was celebrating. Some investors raised serious doubts about whether Carvana truly deserved a spot in the prestigious index. The company's journey from near-bankruptcy concerns to S&P 500 constituent happened remarkably quickly, and skeptics questioned the sustainability of its business model and valuation.
The stock was trading around $472 to $474 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $148.25 to $475.00. Carvana was up a staggering 136.89% year-to-date and 90.79% over the past year. The stock maintained a stronger price trend over short, medium, and long-term periods, though it carried a poor value ranking—suggesting that valuation concerns weren't entirely unfounded.
Microsoft: The Steady Giant Makes Big Moves
Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) kicked off the week with its annual shareholders meeting on December 5. Shareholders approved the 2026 Stock Plan, re-elected 12 directors, ratified Deloitte as auditor, and greenlighted executive compensation amid ESG scrutiny. Standard corporate governance stuff.
But CEO Satya Nadella had bigger news: a landmark $23 billion AI investment push. The package included $17.5 billion in India—Microsoft's largest Asia commitment—for cloud infrastructure and a goal of skilling 20 million people by 2030. Another $5.4 billion would go to Canada for Azure capacity expected online by late 2026. On December 11, the company also paid out a $0.91 per share dividend.
A few retail investors expressed excitement about receiving their dividend payments, though the real story was Microsoft's aggressive push to build out AI infrastructure globally. The company is clearly positioning itself to capture enterprise AI spending at scale.
The stock was trading around $483 to $485 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $344.79 to $555.45. Microsoft was up 15.50% year-to-date but only 7.54% higher over the past year—reflecting some choppiness despite the long-term upward trajectory. The stock maintained a stronger price trend over the long term with weak trends in the short and medium terms, complemented by a strong growth score.
The Week in Context
Retail investor focus this week blended meme-driven narratives with substantive earnings analysis and corporate news flow. It wasn't just about chasing momentum—investors were genuinely engaging with complex questions about AI economics, streaming industry consolidation, and capital allocation strategies.
The S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq all witnessed largely positive market action during the week, providing a supportive backdrop for the individual stock dramas playing out across social media. Whether discussing Broadcom's margin concerns, Oracle's massive backlog, Netflix's acquisition gambit, Carvana's index inclusion, or Microsoft's global AI build-out, retail investors demonstrated they're paying attention to both the numbers and the strategic narratives behind them.
In a market environment where AI dominates headlines and mega-cap tech drives returns, these five stocks captured the essential tensions: growth versus valuation, innovation versus profitability, and hype versus fundamentals. That's what made them this week's most buzzworthy names.




