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Robinhood and GameStop: A Cautionary Tale

2/8/2021

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​There has been a lot written in recent weeks about a few high-flying stocks, most notably GameStop. The wild stock price fluctuations have been driven by speculative trading on app-based trading platforms, particularly Robinhood. It is a fascinating tale involving hedge funds, chat rooms, day traders, investing nerds seeking revenge on Wall Street insiders, financial market turmoil and Congressional condemnation.  Already there are book deals in the works and movie scripts being written.  I will only scratch the surface of this drama by focusing on Robinhood and the danger of making the purchase of high-risk financial instruments as easy as ordering a cup of coffee on your smart phone.
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​GameStop: To understand the recent spotlight on Robinhood and the wild stock price fluctuations in GameStop (GME), a little background is necessary. GameStop is a brick-and-mortar business, located mostly in shopping malls, which mainly sells video games and gaming equipment. In recent years the business has been hit hard as shoppers have abandoned shopping malls and video gaming has moved online. Some Wall Street hedge funds have sought to benefit by GameStop’s plight by betting against its stock. They did this by selling the shares of the stock short, or shorting the stock. Shorting a stock is when an investor borrows shares and immediately sells them, hoping to buy them later at a lower price, return them to the lender and pocket the difference. The important thing to know here is that the hedge funds who shorted the stock make money when the stock price falls, and lose money when the stock price rises. At one point last fall, GameStop was the most heavily shorted stock on Wall Street. Then came along some other investors who thought that GameStop still had value, and started talking it up on internet chat rooms, claiming that all the short selling was overblown.
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​Reddit: ( https://www.reddit.com/): Reddit is a very popular website which is home to thousands of online communities with millions of followers. These communities or forums are known as “subreddits”. The subreddit at the center of all the drama is “WallStreetBets”, (https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/). It was developed as a community for “people to talk about high-risk trades in an unapologetic way, and for people to make some short-term money with disposable income”, according to founder Jaime Rogozinski. Beginning last summer and accelerating into the fall, posts started appearing on the site laying out the case that GameStop was still a viable business and its stock price was undervalued. Subsequent posts began touting the added benefit of pushing up the price of GameStop shares to hurt the Wall Street hedge funds at their own game. It was a way of enacting revenge on Wall Street insiders who had never been punished for their role in the Great Recession. The price of GameStop shares began to rise as more and more people bought into this thesis.  
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​So how does all this fit in with Robinhood and the legion of small investors on its platform? Many of the users of Robinhood were following the threads on WallStreetBets and wanted in on the action. Membership in WallStreetBets, as well as use of online trading platforms increased significantly as people were under COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.  In recent months membership on WallStreetBets has surged to over 8.5 million.
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Robinhood: This online trading platform was introduced in 2015 and offers commission-free trading in stocks, ETFs (exchange traded funds), stock options and cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin is the most notable). In addition to no trading fess, there are no minimum balance requirements to maintain an account. The lack of fees and user-friendly smart phone app has attracted a large following of young users. As of last May, Robinhood had over 13 million accounts. The average age of the account holder is 31, half of whom had no previous experience trading stocks.

According to Robinhood’s website ( https://robinhood.com/us/en/), “We’re on a mission to democratize finance for all”. “At Robinhood, we believe the financial system should be built to work for everyone. That’s why we create products that let you start investing at your own pace, on your own terms”.  Setting up an account on Robinhood is quick and easy, and it usually takes less than an hour to activate.
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If Robinhood is Free to Use, How do They Make Money? Robinhood’s business model encourages lots of stock trades, which is how they make most of their money. Wall Street firms pay Robinhood to send their buy and sell orders to them. These “market maker” firms do the actual buying and selling of the stocks, and make money by finding better prices in the broader markets than what Robinhood customers paid. This is perfectly legal, but Robinhood needs large trading volumes on its platform to be sustainable.
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According to research firm Alphacution, ( https://alphacution.com/tag/robinhood/), in the first three months of 2020, Robinhood users traded nine times as many shares as E-Trade customers, and forty times as many shares as those holding accounts at Charles Schwab. During that same time period, Robinhood users traded eighty-eight times as many options contracts as did the average Charles Schwab customer.  
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​For $5/month and an average minimum balance of $2000, you can establish a Robinhood Gold account. This account allows the user to purchase stocks on margin. This simply means that Robinhood will lend you money to purchase stocks, and charge you interest on the money. Purchasing stocks using borrowed money is very risky. It can magnify your losses as well as your gains.  
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​Democratizing Finance Sounds Good. But is it?  This all sounds great, and I am a huge proponent of opening up financial markets to the masses. But finance is much more than buying and selling stocks. I would argue that for most people, particularly inexperienced investors, buying and selling individual stocks is too risky and should play only a minor role, if any, in their investing and financial plans.

First and foremost, Robinhood is a stock trading platform. It provides very little financial education, and has few safeguards in place to prevent the inexperienced investor from getting in way over their head. Robinhood doesn’t have a customer support phone number, so all correspondence is done via email. The platform provides no tools to develop a comprehensive financial plan, and it doesn’t support retirement accounts. This means that all trades done on the platform are subject to taxation.

On Robinhood you cannot purchase mutual funds, bonds or CDs. The only options are very risky assets such as individual stocks, stock options and cryptocurrencies. Stock options are very risky financial derivatives which are reserved for the most experienced investors. But you can begin trading options on Robinhood after answering a few simple questions. Most financial planners would not consider what is taking place on Robinhood a sound investment strategy. It has more in common with gambling than investing. No one would consider the purchase of a lottery ticket, or placing a bet at the horse track as investing. I feel that for the inexperienced investor, Robinhood falls into this category. Robinhood has made it simple for inexperienced, mostly young “investors” to day trade highly speculative financial instruments, often with borrowed money. The large trading volumes on shares of GameStop, AMC, and other stocks promoted on WallStreetBets has really shined a light on the dangers of the platform in the hands of inexperience traders. 
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​Robinhood Falters Under a Barrage of Trading Activity:  In recent weeks trading activity on Robinhood has surged, propelled by shares of GameStop and a few other stocks pumped up by posts on WallStreetBets and other online forums. This forced Robinhood to post billions of additional dollars with the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, Wall Street’s central clearing hub. These funds are required to cover customers’ transactions while they wait for trades to settle. Robinhood scrambled to raise the necessary funds from private venture capital firms. On January 28, 2021, in order to preserve cash, Robinhood restricted the buying of shares of GameStop, AMC, and a few other highly volatile stocks. This resulted in an immediate uproar from users who saw this move as a betrayal of Robinhood’s mission. Afterall, nothing restricted the ability of hedge funds and other Wall Street money managers from freely trading in these stocks.

​Protestors picketed outside of Robinhood’s headquarters in Menlo Park, and calls for investigations were raised in the halls of Congress. Everyone from Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to Ted Cruz cried foul at what they perceived as restrictions placed on small investors to the benefit of big institutional investors. On January 29, 2021 Robinhood lifted some of its restrictions, but trading was still limited in select stocks, and would be for the following week. 
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​Will Congress go forward with its threats to investigate Robinhood, and will Robinhood regain the trust of its users? Stay tuned. The blog on Robinhood’s website has a running commentary with a detailed explanation of its decisions over the past few weeks, (https://blog.robinhood.com/).
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​For those of you who believe that Wall Street is rigged to the disadvantage of the small investor, I can’t argue the point. But for those who believe that Robinhood is the great equalizer, I am afraid that you have fallen for a slick and trendy narrative. Robinhood couldn’t exist without Wall Street and it derives a significant portion of its profits by dealing with Wall Street firms. WallStreetBets and other stock tip sites are not just the dominion of tech savvy traders on Robinhood. Hedge funds scour sites like WallStreetBets continuously for new investment ideas to exploit. Sure, there were a few hedge funds that lost billions betting against GameStop. So, who really profited? A few little guys for sure. But the vast majority of small investors on Robinhood and other trading apps lost a lot of money. As the price of GameStop shot up, propelled by furious buying on Robinhood, who do you think they were buying those shares from? Mostly hedge funds who caught on to the game early. One hedge fund, Senvest Management made over $700 million in GameStop shares alone. The original players on WallStreetBets made a killing going against the hedge funds by pumping up the price of GameStop stock. But the little guys ​who started to pile in during the final weeks of January will not have the same happy outcome.
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The price of GameStop was $18.84/share at the start of January, and it peaked at $483/share on January 28, 2021. Then the price dropped precipitously over a handful of trading days, with the value of all outstanding shares of GameStop declining by over $29 billion dollars. The closing stock price today was $60/share.   
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 Final Thoughts: GameStop and easy access to stock trading by novice investors is a cautionary tale. There is no easy path to quick riches on Wall Street, and the risks of high-volume stock trading certainly outweigh the potential gains. I fear that bad experiences by newbies on trading platforms like Robinhood may turn off a generation of young investors who equate sensible investing to flipping stocks. Investing and proper financial management is so much more than trading stocks and options. In one sense, Robinhood and similar trading apps are akin to having a gambling casino in your pocket.
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I am all for open access to financial markets. But more importantly, I am a strong advocate of comprehensive financial education so that people don’t fall victim to the latest and greatest “investing” tool. There are a lot of great websites dedicated to financial planning, education, and support for building a secure financial future. Robinhood is cheap to use, but it is bare bones, lacks any kind of educational support, and provides only a tiny sliver of what is needed for a comprehensive financial plan. So why use Robinhood when there are many other online investing options, backed up by big banks with decades of experience, all with minimal fees, or none at all? Here is a link to a list of fine online brokerage firms for beginners (as well as experienced investors), which cater to a person’s total financial needs, (https://www.nerdwallet.com/best/investing/online-brokers-for-beginners).

Robinhood is a stock trading app, not a place to build long term wealth, other than for its own investors. 
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Thanks,
Armchair American
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