For your weekend reading, I submit from this week's Investment News still another perspective on the GameStop debacle that caused so much commotion in the markets a couple weeks ago and almost brought down the hedge funds. This article is a defense of what they did, though personally I still feel it had to be illegal. We'll see what comes from the SEC investigation. Meanwhile, enjoy the weekend.
2-8-21 The GameStop lawsuits are missing the point - InvestmentNews
The GameStop lawsuits are missing the point
A
host of discount brokerages, including Robinhood, Charles Schwab and ETrade,
are now facing accusations of market manipulation. The challenges are expected
to face tall legal hurdles.
· February 8, 2021
· By Sean Allocca Investment news
We’re midway through February and already Robinhood’s having a
tough year.
After settling regulatory complaints in
2020, the discount brokerage is now facing accusations of market manipulation.
The fateful decision to block GameStop Corp., AMC Entertainment Holdings
Inc. and a handful of other stocks in
January was condemned by the Twittersphere as
well as some prominent U.S. politicians like
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. It even
prompted Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., to
demand Robinhood Markets Inc. explain its decision.
Lawsuits quickly followed, including this gem alleging an
“overarching conspiracy” to prevent the market from freely operating to help
Wall Street firms from “hemorrhaging losses.” The defendants include almost
every broker that halted trades and others, including Morgan Stanley, ETrade
and Charles Schwab. Legal experts have
said the lawsuits face tall legal hurdles.
While refreshing to see the likes of AOC and Cruz in agreement for
a fleeting moment on Twitter, these lawsuits and ensuing investigations will
ultimately miss the point. Robinhood is well within its rights to halt trades
in any stock. Check the fine print.
Robinhood also isn’t the only platform available to traders. For a
host of other options, just google Ally Financial, M1 Finance, EToro,
Interactive Brokers, FreeTrade or WeBull.
And, while retail traders weren’t able to buy those stocks and
participate in the upside, they could liquidate their positions. Sure, some may
have lost the ability to turn a profit, but ultimately Robinhood’s actions were
designed to help retail investors steer clear of what looked eerily similar to
a pump-and-dump scheme.
While shares of GameStop didn’t plummet while Robinhood halted
trading, someone was going to be left holding the bag and those shares
ultimately cratered the following Monday and Tuesday. The decision may have
saved some of its most inexperienced retail investors millions.
While some contend it’s not Robinhood’s job to put up safety
rails, many argued the counterpoint in recent months, after Robinhood took
criticism after an inexperienced options trader took
his own life after believing he lost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The CEO of Webull offered a logical reason why trades were
blocked, and it has to do with settling them. According to Anthony Denier, the
restrictions were placed on the firm by his clearinghouse after increased
volume made the price of settling trades skyrocket.
“We’re seeing politicians jump on the bandwagon so they can start
trending on Twitter,” Denier said. “It has nothing to do with some smoke-filled
cigar room with Wall Street firms getting together to the dismay of the retail
traders. This has to do with the settlement mechanism of the market.”
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The real question is whether or not online forums should have the
power to create surges in stocks and what the ramifications will ultimately be
on the markets. While the forum said it was trying to stick it to the hedge
funds, it also artificially inflated the price of a stock for its own gain.
Robinhood simply has the largest target on its back. The brokerage
needs to answer pointed questions about its actions, and so too should other
platforms. The Securities and Exchange Commission has likely already started an investigation.
Instead of tin hats and lawsuits based on conspiracy theories, the industry should promote transparency at all levels — including those behind the surge into so-called meme stocks and what can be done to discourage such behavior in the future.
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