Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 20
Parle Industries Shares Jump 5% as Modi’s Toffee Gift Sparks Mistaken Buying
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 20

Parle Industries Shares Jump 5% as Modi’s Toffee Gift Sparks Mistaken Buying

5 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · May 20
  • Parle Industries rose 5% on Wednesday—its biggest gain in two months—after traders appeared to buy the stock on confusion over the Parle name.
  • The trigger was Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s gift of caramel toffees to Italian counterpart Giorgia Meloni, which drew attention to Parle Products, the unlisted maker of Melody candies.
  • Parle Industries is a tiny software company, not the biscuits-and-candy business behind Parle-G and Melody, making the rally a case of mistaken identity.
  • The move highlights how headline-driven retail trading can briefly lift unrelated small-cap shares when they resemble better-known brands.
A prime minister's candy gift pumped the wrong stock. What happens when the sugar rush ends for investors?
How does a private company capitalize on a stock market frenzy it had nothing to do with?
With AI now tracking memes, can regulators prevent the market's next case of mistaken stock identity?