miketorcy a écrit :
Avec des moteurs de recherche de plus en plus restrictifs (Qwant compris), on n’est pas rendu !
WHO USES STONKS?
Stonks memes are often used to make (often hypothetical) jokes about situations where a person thinks they are cleverly making a profit but aren’t or can’t.
Stonks is sometimes used in an extended way to comment on all sorts of non-financial situations seen as a self-own or ironic in some way. The following quoted tweet roughly translates to, from Portuguese: “Conference on the coronavirus canceled due to the coronavirus.”
stonks
https://t.co/GWWxp9d7lv— мσявεcκ (@biameubeck) March 12, 2020
is also sometimes a generic, humorous way to refer to stocks, especially when they have dropped.
Earlier this week:
Ha! 7% drop in stonks, #bitcoin calls that a Thursday.
Thursday: pic.twitter.com/R2J9ZIAhwt
— Block DX (@BlockDXExchange) March 12, 2020
stonks got me like

pic.twitter.com/Bgjc03hY7R
— aristidexo (@aristidexo) March 12, 2020
Stonks is a way to make a show of ignorance about the stock market or take pleasure when the stock market plunges. The apparent attitude behind the latter is the idea that the stock market—and finance and capitalism more generally—only benefits rich people and big corporations.
A riff of the original stonks meme, featuring not stonks, is sometimes used when stock prices fall on the market.
Oh no not the stonks

#stonks pic.twitter.com/OUWbzIz7t2
— Sandro (@svicent7) March 12, 2020