Massachusetts Wants To Pull the Plug On Robinhood (cnn.com) 106
Regulators in Massachusetts are seeking to revoke Robinhood's broker-dealer license in the state, after accusing the company of failing to properly account for fractional shares traded by customers on its platform. They also say the company "continues to entice and induce inexperienced customers into risky trading." CNN reports: The battle began in December when regulators in Massachusetts filed a 24-page complaint against Robinhood accusing the company of violating state law and regulations by failing to protect customers and safeguard its system. Officials alleged Robinhood lured inexperienced investors to its platform with gaming elements such as colorful confetti -- a practice that the company recently said it is getting rid of. The amended complaint filed Thursday says Robinhood has continued a pattern of aggressively enticing customers, including some with "little or no investment experience." It cites news reports indicating Robinhood has expanded margin lending and sought to persuade customers to deposit their stimulus checks by offering "free cash" for deposits.
Robinhood's conduct since the complaint was filed in December "poses a substantial and continued risk to Massachusetts investors," the complaint said. Massachusetts regulators said Robinhood has failed to report its fractional share trade executions for over a year, "demonstrating its inability to follow the most basic requirements" required of broker-dealers.
In a blog post, Robinhood sharply criticized what it described as "unfounded, politicized allegations and unreasonable demands" from regulators in Massachusetts and warned that revoking its license would block access for millions of customers. "The Massachusetts Securities Division's attempt to prevent Massachusetts residents from choosing how they invest is elitist and against everything we stand for," Robinhood said. "We don't believe our customers are naive as the Massachusetts Securities Division paints them to be." Robinhood fired back by filing a complaint and motion in Massachusetts State Court for a preliminary injunction that would stop the regulatory case against the company. Robinhood is arguing that the regulator's new fiduciary rule "exceeds its authority" under both state and federal law. "By trying to block Robinhood, the division is attempting to bring its residents back in time and reinstate the financial barriers that Robinhood was founded to break down," Robinhood said in the blog post.
Robinhood's conduct since the complaint was filed in December "poses a substantial and continued risk to Massachusetts investors," the complaint said. Massachusetts regulators said Robinhood has failed to report its fractional share trade executions for over a year, "demonstrating its inability to follow the most basic requirements" required of broker-dealers.
In a blog post, Robinhood sharply criticized what it described as "unfounded, politicized allegations and unreasonable demands" from regulators in Massachusetts and warned that revoking its license would block access for millions of customers. "The Massachusetts Securities Division's attempt to prevent Massachusetts residents from choosing how they invest is elitist and against everything we stand for," Robinhood said. "We don't believe our customers are naive as the Massachusetts Securities Division paints them to be." Robinhood fired back by filing a complaint and motion in Massachusetts State Court for a preliminary injunction that would stop the regulatory case against the company. Robinhood is arguing that the regulator's new fiduciary rule "exceeds its authority" under both state and federal law. "By trying to block Robinhood, the division is attempting to bring its residents back in time and reinstate the financial barriers that Robinhood was founded to break down," Robinhood said in the blog post.
Taxachusetts (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Taxachusetts (Score:2)
Or Robinhood got outgrafted.
Re: Taxachusetts (Score:2, Insightful)
If you are in government, just remember, if people dont want to do something, they do not need your regulation to refrain.
Re: (Score:1)
Pounded into the US psyche by Ronald Reagan, a man who spent almost half his life on government payrolls (not even counting his time in the Army, spent on assignment to his Hollywood studio).
Re: (Score:2)
Guess we got ourselves a Reaganaut on this here board.
Fun slogan, too bad it's bullshit (Score:2)
The nine most frightening words in the English language: Im from the government, and im here to help you. If you are in government, just remember, if people dont want to do something, they do not need your regulation to refrain.
Yeah, nice quote...from the president who started the whole trend of insanely reckless government spending. The size of the government increased under Reagan's watch...but people like you were all too eager to watch your government protections eviscerated for tax cuts to billionaires and pointless defense spending.
Government is too complex to be summarized in 9 words. Yeah, overreach is bad, but wanting to shrink government without knowing what you're doing is far worse. Deregulation has been a cons
Re: (Score:1)
Re: Taxachusetts (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Taxachusetts (Score:4, Interesting)
You don't understand what the government here, and especially the government of Massachusetts, is really like.
Is there a need to reign in corporations' ability to bend people over? Sure, absolutely, but that's not what is going on here.
The government of MA is hopelessly corrupt (three speakers of the house in a row went to prison), and the government has no regard whatsoever for the rule of law. They will bend and twist and abuse laws to whatever extent necessary in order to get their way. The idea that laws should be clear and straightforward, allowing people and companies to understand compliance and be able to achieve it, is something they *actively* fight. One of the job requirements to become AG in the state is to be a merciless bully. If there isn't a law they can twist to suit their ends, they use intimidation.
Bribes, legal or illegal, is one good possible explanation of this. Protecting pension funds invested in hedge funds is an even more likely scenario. In reality it's probably both and several other corrupt factors we will find out about in 10 years.
Re: (Score:2)
You obviously don't read very well. Nothing in what I said attempts to absolve robinhood of wrongdoing whatsoever. I'm sure they're guilty of bending people over in countless ways.
As far as, "show us why you think Massachusetts is corrupt"....just LOL. Three speakers of the house in a row in prison, and that's just the tip of a very big iceberg.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What I meant was, show us that THIS decision is about corruption in Massachusetts rather than Robinhood being corrupt. You're just poisoning the well. That's a logical fallacy. You need to link the supposed Massachusetts corruption to this event or it's just irrelevant.
Re: (Score:2)
MA government employee? Fair enough, I wouldn't want to upset the gravy train if I was riding it either. Of course, I wouldn't work for such a relentlessly corrupt, racist, and morally bankrupt organization.
I'm not going to explain the mixed bag of consequences of attacking a company that caters to retail investors, or the rather shaky regulatory ground this is resting on to you. There are other comments which go into detail. Of course their motives are questionable.
Everything in the MA government opera
Re: (Score:1)
You're reading it wrong pal, I'm not pro Massachusetts I'm virulently anti-Robinhood. Anything that deflects from Robinhood smacks of paid shills to me, because I know they do it. They are basically just dataminers for the big hedge funds. I hope their IPO fails miserably.
If you want to invest, go through an older established brokerage. One that was around before the Internet. Never, ever use Robinhood.
Re: (Score:2)
Because the older brokerages are not corrupt or connected with big hedge funds?
Re: (Score:1)
The older brokerages are fiduciary. Robinhood does not enter into a fiduciary relationship with it's "customers." They are legally allowed to fuck you over for profit.
Robinhood offers "free trades." Ask yourself how it offers free margin accounts to every Tom Dick and Harry? What is their product, and who do they sell it to?
Their customers are the big hedge funds and the product they sell is information about their users' trades. Do not trust them. They are in business to make sure their real customers make
Re: (Score:2)
I live in New Mexico, where in the world did you get the idea that I have anything to do with Massachusetts? If the history is so well known that you can base assumptions on it, it must be very easy for you to quote sources. But you don't. Why not?
You have no sources, just more anti government, pro corporate propaganda. Your opinion is worse than worthless, it is actively harmful.
Re: (Score:2)
LOL @ "pro corporate propaganda". I already addressed this.
I don't pull sources because I've had the discussion on MA corruption so, so, so many times and there is nothing left for me to learn from doing so.
If you seemed like someone interesting to discuss this with I might still bother, but you're from the other side of the country talking nonsense about a state you very obviously know absolutely nothing about. You're also not listening. It's obvious you just want to pound on your ill-informed opinion.
Re: (Score:2)
I was born in New Haven, Connecticut. We went to Boston quite a bit when I was growing up. Most of my family still lives in Wallingford, Connecticut.
You should really stop trying to guess other people's circumstances and base arguments on facts, rather than your imagination. Perhaps you can see why I don't trust your opinions. You have demonstrated, twice in this conversation, that you make shit up and pretend it is fact.
Re: (Score:2)
I spent a ton of time in Wallingford. You could even say I, "went there quite a bit." Yet, I still wouldn't offer an opinion on the government of CT because I didn't live there, follow the news, find myself impacted by their actions, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Given all the words you've typed in response, how hard would it have been to include just one link?
Re: (Score:2)
Super duper easy. Not going to do it though. You'll ignore it in favor of what you've already decided and, also, you've said literally not one thing of interest this entire thread.
Re: (Score:2)
Same back atcha bud. Just empty, meaningless drivel. To back up my side of things and show just how easy it is, here:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/n... [forbes.com]
Wow, Massachusetts isn't even in the top ten states! Want more? Yeah, you know you love it when I rub the facts in your face:
https://worldpopulationreview.... [worldpopul...review.com]
Ooh, it's not even as corrupt as any of it's neighbors! Makes your argument look like dog shit. You want more? Yeah you do you dirty boy. Here, fucking lick it up, dog:
https://qz.com/1419802/which-s... [qz.com]
Fuc
Re: (Score:2)
Wow! You're obviously super upset about this.
Just FYI - you're arguing with points I never actually made!
Re: (Score:2)
Not upset, but you are a liar. You said Massachusetts was corrupt, I show here that it less corrupt, by any measure, than more than half the states. Which means it is more accurate to say it is not corrupt than to claim it is. Either that or the US as a whole is just a third world country. Or maybe both.
Mostly I'm pissed that you couldn't spend five seconds actually looking any of this up and just wanted me to take your word for it. Yes, if you make me waste my time proving you wrong, I'm going to dunk on y
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, people who aren't upset are always going on unhinged name calling tirades. Sorry, not "upset", just "pissed".
Got it.
The point you're making is also specious. MA is less corrupt than other states according to some information you googled, so therefore the corruption in MA is not a big deal and I have no reason to question its motives. Obviously that does not follow, but then you don't actually seem to remember what point I made that you're arguing with.
I told you before that I lived there for quite a
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, there is some corruption in Massachusetts. The question is, is it more, or les than in other states? My research shows that it is less than in other states. Is it a problem? Well, any corruption is a problem. But your collection of anecdotes do not supersede actual studies of government corruption. Quoting individual cases won't change the fact that there is less corruption in MA than in most states.
Most any American will think their own state has more corruption because it tends to be local news, and
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, there is some corruption in Massachusetts. The question is, is it more, or les than in other states?
That's not the question at all, though. That's the question you made up because it was easier to argue about than what we're actually discussing, about which you know almost nothing.
Quoting individual cases won't change the fact that there is less corruption in MA than in most states.
Which is completely and totally irrelevant to the topic at hand.
Most any American will think their own state has more corruption because it tends to be local news, and they simply do not hear about other states. And that is the case here. Your whole argument rests on the idea that the only reason Massachusetts might have for regulating Robinhood is corruption.
They're not "regulating Robinhood". Well, unless maybe you're using "regulate" like Warren G. They're seeking to pull their broker-dealer license under existing financial regs.
Robinhood are absolute shit brokers, thieves, and tools working for the big hedge funds.
A position I speculated may be true when you tried to argue with a fictitious point I w
Re: (Score:3)
You obviously don't read very well. Nothing in what I said attempts to absolve robinhood of wrongdoing whatsoever. I'm sure they're guilty of bending people over in countless ways.
As far as, "show us why you think Massachusetts is corrupt"....just LOL. Three speakers of the house in a row in prison, and that's just the tip of a very big iceberg.
This is misleading at best... only one went to jail on corruption charges and that was over 10 years ago. The other two were charged with false testimony and tax evasion. This isn't acceptable in any light but it's not exactly the deep corruption picture that you're painting.
DiMasi, 65, was convicted by a federal jury June 15 on charges of conspiracy, extortion and theft of honest services by fraud as part of a kickback scheme. Finneran pleaded guilty in 2007 to a federal obstruction of justice charge fo
Re: (Score:2)
Oh my goodness.
I've had this discussion enough times that it doesn't really offer an opportunity for me to learn anything new by googling up a very long list of instances of corruption in the state, so I'm not going to bother. Needless to say, you can come up with a very long list in a very short period of time. The speakers of the house is just a tiny piece of it. The three martini lunches, no show jobs, the official stuffing an envelope of cash into her bra, the bars full of big dig construction worker
Re: (Score:2)
there are issues in MA, but no more than other State.
MA never released the autopsy report on Mary Jo Kopechne. All other autopsy reports in the state are public record. MA is as crooked today as it was when Joe Kennedy was first greasing palms to get his boys into the congress.
According to Wikipedia: "Massachusetts officials pressed for weeks to have Kopechne's body exhumed for an autopsy, but in December 1969 a Pennsylvania judge sided with the parents' request not to disturb her burial site."
From another article: "Within hours of Kopechne's death, a Kennedy aide named Dun Gifford flew a chartered plane into Edgartown (the Martha's Vineyard town of which Chappaquiddick is a part), with orders to get the body off the island. Before Massachusetts officials had even decided whet
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If MA is #22 then I pity the rest of the states because MA is, definitely, hopelessly corrupt. As you say, the country at the federal level is also fairly corrupt, so I don't know that saying a state being #22 for corruption in a high corruption country is cause for optimism.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Supporting government is not resisting corporations, it is empowering them. Why do you pay $200+/hr for a guy to use a wrench on your sink instead of the $12-15/hr he is being paid? Government. Why can't you reasonably start a bank? Government. Why do you have to pay a private corporation to handle the transfer whe
Re: Taxachusetts (Score:4, Insightful)
Because with companies you have a choice of being hosed or not since there are options where with the government you are forced into a gang-rape situation and you have zero recourse. Big difference.
Re: (Score:1)
you have a choice of being hosed or not
vast oversimplification to the point of stupidity, markets can trend naturally towards restricting choice to the point where there is, in effect, none
with the government you are forced
vast oversimplification to the point of stupidity, governments represent the general will of society.
if your car isn't working, it's not because cars are dumb, it's because you refuse to service it
Americans are just taught that nuance and compromise are dumb. which is dumb.
Re: (Score:2)
vast oversimplification to the point of stupidity, markets can trend naturally towards restricting choice to the point where there is, in effect, none
Then if push comes to shove, place some regulations on the market to keep the market from becoming restrictive. However, with private companies you can float between them for your needs, but it is awfully hard to float between different Federal governments when there is only one.
vast oversimplification to the point of stupidity, governments represent the general will of society.
So on one hand, previous posters were talking about how the people in government are taking graft on topics that go against what is best, but then on the other hand you say they represent the general will of society. Pick a side and
Re: Taxachusetts (Score:3)
Because we can freely choose to associate with RobinHood. We have no such option with the government.
Also, maybe you're aware that the United States was founded by political dissidents, criminals, and persecuted religious extremists. Not exactly a foundation for government trust.
Re: (Score:2)
Well we did have our start as a bloody revolution against a king, the icon of strong central government. But the gist is quite simple the idea is to live ones life freely being the one who calls the shot for what you can and will do 100% of the time.
In practice that doesn't work even without government. Some of the things I want require you to go along and sometimes you aren't willing. I can up my percentage by reducing yours. Government is
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
"I don't understand American suspicion of government being so high"
We had our start as a bloody revolution against a king; the icon of strong central government. The gist of the idea is really quite simple. The objective is to live ones life freely. That means being the one who calls the shots for what you can and will do 100% of the time.
That doesn't work even without government. Some of the thing
Answer - Dunning Kruger (Score:1)
I don't understand American suspicion of government being so high, while giving a blanket pass to companies like robinhood that deliberately give consumers the financial equivalent of a shank in the kidneys during a jailhouse shower rape.
...why? Well, long-term trends are screwing most of the country economically. One of our 2 political parties has figured out they can get major campaign contributions and votes in several states if they focus on guns, gay marriage, fighting political correctness, non-existent voter fraud, or whatever distracts the dumbasses while giving generous tax breaks that only benefit shareholders and wealthy individuals.
...the dumbasses will fight to be raped by the corporations in the name of these token causes s
Re: (Score:2)
...why? Well, long-term trends are screwing most of the country economically. One of our 2 political parties has figured out they can get major campaign contributions and votes in several states if they focus on guns, gay marriage, fighting political correctness, non-existent voter fraud, or whatever distracts the dumbasses while giving generous tax breaks that only benefit shareholders and wealthy individuals.
You got it half right. The Rs are doing what you are describing. The other half is the effects of automation in the long run and the effects of large single party cities in the other half of the political spectrum. Both parties play on specific human weaknesses to get your support. On the other side you have increasingly corrupt local governments running cities which is part of their solution to what to do about automation. The weakness this plays on is that you are perfect and someone else is the sou
Long term trends are not political (Score:2)
...why? Well, long-term trends are screwing most of the country economically. One of our 2 political parties has figured out they can get major campaign contributions and votes in several states if they focus on guns, gay marriage, fighting political correctness, non-existent voter fraud, or whatever distracts the dumbasses while giving generous tax breaks that only benefit shareholders and wealthy individuals.
You got it half right. The Rs are doing what you are describing. The other half is the effects of automation in the long run and the effects of large single party cities in the other half of the political spectrum. Both parties play on specific human weaknesses to get your support. On the other side you have increasingly corrupt local governments running cities which is part of their solution to what to do about automation. The weakness this plays on is that you are perfect and someone else is the source of your problems (Rich, Military, or Rural). Both sides have their boogiemen (ANTIFA, Q-ANON). Both sides have their propaganda arms (MSNBC, FOX). Both sides are able to trick people into supporting policies that don't benefit themselves (rural farmers who vote on social issues, lemo libs voting for socialist policies).
The long term trends are apolitical. It's not one party dominating a local city's government. It's automation and the temptations of deregulation and low taxes and consolidation of businesses. I get a dozen unsolicited recruiter e-mails on a slow day. 15 years ago, it was from a wide variety of companies. Today it's only the major players. The startups are getting acquired. The medium sized businesses are getting acquired or folding. If your only choices to work as a software engineer get narrowed
Or (Score:4, Informative)
You could at least read the fucking summary.
Massachusetts regulators said Robinhood has failed to report its fractional share trade executions for over a year, "demonstrating its inability to follow the most basic requirements" required of broker-dealers.
So yeah keep pulling facts out of your ass.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Don’t forget that a young man committed suicide because Robin Hood let him believe he had lost hundreds of thousands of dollars. The company sounds like a real shit show.
Re: Or (Score:2)
Based on the numbers I saw, the bit about being on margin is more of a technicality since RH extends enough margin to avoid GFVs by default. The bigger deal is that he was running a credit spread that ran sour and, unlike most other brokerages that treat transactions that you enter as a multi-leg transactions as a singular entity (at least without warnings), RH treats them as independent transactions, leading to a time delay in reporting that's technically accurate, but misleading.
My other brokerages realiz
Re: (Score:1)
Mass Retirement fund (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
You saw how the fake 'people's Senator' Warren from MA had knives out for retail investors, right?
At this point - good - cryptographic governance is better than violent government anyway. Let's get it over.
These people can have their defined-benefit pension and it will buy them a sandwich a week.
Re: (Score:2)
I think the idea of the unsophisticated invest is antiquated because information and data is no longer actively hidden and heavily monetized. A person who wants to learn can, and should be allowed to. Platforms like Robinhood can allow for this, and are not frauds like so many schemes of the past.
On the other hand, it is does suffer from the same defect we have seen over the past coup
Re: (Score:2)
On the other hand, it is does suffer from the same defect we have seen over the past couple decades, where there is a lack of risk management and the small investors suffers. Here we see it in the lack of oversight for margin loans. Back in the housing crisis, it was giving mortgages assuming prices would always rise, packaging those mortgages so no one really owned them, and then foreclosing often without due process.
If RH stopped allowing options trading, I would be much more likely to support this point of view.
Re: (Score:2)
It seems the Mass. Govt Employees Retirement fund invested in Hedge Funds short on the WSB stocks. These regulators are desperate to save their pensions by preventing Hedge Fund bankruptcies
Huh?
https://www.masslive.com/polit... [masslive.com]
The Massachusetts duty of care responsibility is a (Score:2)
There's no real way to judge what level of advertising satisfies Massachusetts regulations. Hanging such severe judgement on a single line of regulation is a bit capricious.
Re:The Massachusetts duty of care responsibility i (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe the same as what happened with the duty of care imposed on European banks regarding watching for money laundering and criminal activity. Or the duty of care imposed on social media for keeping fake news and hate mongering off the net. Create vague regulations with unclear requirements and stiff penalties, and companies will go above and beyond to ensure that they remain compliant. Perhaps to the extreme level that the legislator would like to see but didn't quite dare to put into law.
Hmm, almost sounds unappetizing when you put it that way ..
Re: (Score:2)
It really bugs me when people start their comment in title box and then just keep going but at least they finish their fucking sentences before starting a new one.
Re: (Score:2)
The regulations seem simple enough. Perhaps you should read the article?
Massachusetts regulators said Robinhood has failed to report its fractional share trade executions for over a year, "demonstrating its inability to follow the most basic requirements" required of broker-dealers.
Re: (Score:3)
The amended complaint filed Thursday says Robinhood has continued a pattern of aggressively enticing customers
That seems to indicate that the regulators are upset Robinhood advertises and encourages it's customers to use it service.
Re: (Score:2)
enticing customers to make poorly informed financial risks .. libertarians can cry all you like but the general will of the society frowns on a private enterprise that's predicated on what amounts to renting motorcycles and vodka to 20 year olds who chug, refuse to wear a helmet, and speed off
the wet dream of adults being self accountable islands continues to perplex morons
i know "person can do what they want" is a very attractive ethos for people without a lot of space in their heads, but it's no way to ru
Re: The Massachusetts duty of care responsibility (Score:2)
Those vodka chugging adolescents might hurt themselves, others, or others' property. RobinHood only allows them to hurt their own property.
Re: (Score:3)
libertarians can cry all you like but the general will of the society frowns on a private enterprise that's predicated on what amounts to renting motorcycles and vodka to 20 year olds who chug, refuse to wear a helmet, and speed off
Society has no problem with a private enterprise that's predicated on selling motorcycles to 21 year olds who go out and chug vodka and speed off without helmets.
Society has no problem with a private enterprise that's predicated on selling motorcycles to 18 year olds who ride them like jackasses doing 100mph in a 40mph zone.
Society has no problem with a private enterprise that's predicated on selling sports cars to parents who let their 16 year olds drive them and race them on public streets.
Society ha
Re: (Score:2)
Massachusetts deliberately obfuscates it's laws and regulations to make them as opaque and impossible to comply with as possible. It gives the AG the flexibility to bully people in ways which would not actually be legal if written in to law, and helps keep people afraid by making compliance a very vague target that you can never really be sure if you hit.
Read that as fictional shares. (Score:2)
Considering the shorting BS going on I'm not surprised.
Would that only affect customers in that state? (Score:2)
Honest question. If those Regulators in Massachusetts were successful, would that only affect residents in that state or would it affect residents in other states?
Re: (Score:1)
Unless other states followed suit in solidarity, then yes it would only affect residents of that state.
Re: (Score:1)
Thank you!
Colorful confetti? (Score:2)
Could someone kindly explain to me what âoegaming elements such as colorful confettiâ means in the context of Robinhood?
Re: (Score:1)
They literally had a confetti animation celebrating different actions. See:
https://zh-prod-1cc738ca-7d3b-... [googleapis.com]
https://images.wsj.net/im-2219... [wsj.net]
Re: Colorful confetti? (Score:2)
Thanks!
Re: (Score:1)
You're welcome!
Re: (Score:2)
Well, now that GRPN is $50.15, if you had bought $1,000 worth when that screenshot was taken, it’d now be worth $10,902 (9.9x profit). Woo!!!! But wait! That’s a total lie!!!
Based on the screenshot, and knowing that it reverse-split 1:20 in June 2020, it seems that the screenshot was taken on 20 April 2018, which today, would have been valued at $92.18 ($4.609 x 20).
If you had been holding it since then, you would have actually lost -$455.94 (-45.6%, ouch!!!).
Robinhood isn't the problem (Score:5, Insightful)
The issue is far broader. Take YouTube as an example. Despite frequently banning or demonetising channels, supposedly for wrongdoing, they run no end of dodgy adverts for stock trading. There are the adverts that very plainly mislead people in to believing they can invest $250 in Amazon or Netflix stock and make thousands within a day. Google publicly bewails a flood of misinformation while continuing to make money from these dubious adverts.
The issue isn't with a single company any more than a single pyramid scheme can be eradicated to end the problem. It's about education and ensuring adverts present a realistic picture. For example, for investments it'd seem reasonable to require that adverts prominently present average returns (as a minus if most people lose money). If people see that and still want to take a chance then that's their business.
Re: (Score:2)
It's about education and ensuring adverts present a realistic picture.
So we’re all screwed....
Re: (Score:2)
Heh heh, yup. Last one to Mars is a rotten egg.
Re: Robinhood isn't the problem (Score:2)
It's about liability. The whole problem would be gone overnight if they simply setup a government portal where people can report how they were lied to and receive a $10k (or whatever) payout for each incident. The company would be on the hook for say $20k, and that additional money would go to enforcement investigation.
Not trading. casino (Score:2)
It's just becoming more honest, so when will people call it gambling and just admit it's a big casino? How bad does it have to get?
Answer: really bad, over the top beyond obvious.... just look at Trump to see how incredibly retarded half the population is (retarded is the proper term too, look it up.)
Re: (Score:2)
It's just becoming more honest, so when will people call it gambling and just admit it's a big casino?
Sir, this is a casino, not some kind of shady back alley brokerage!
Some dumb, some legit. (Score:5, Informative)
I've had an RH account since it was in the equivalent of beta, and they've had issues of various scale for a long time. Unfortunately, I think regulators are barking up a lot of wrong trees. (But just for fun, Massachusetts is way overzealous in this regard: https://www.nextbigfuture.com/... [nextbigfuture.com] )
Just since COVID:
Multiple service outages during 'important' times. When the market realized that COVID was going to be a serious thing and the economy tanked hard that day-- they went down entirely for a few hours. If you had enough assets and complained, they offered you like a 20$ Amazon card. On Gamestop Day, they had a lack of funds (but 'not a liquidity crisis') that led to them (and other brokerages) shutting down the purchase, but not selling, of a list of highly volatile companies. Some of them were household names too, like Starbucks. Yesterday, they had an outage on their crypto system when Dogecoin climbed.
Ridiculously awful handling of spreads, both from an execution and informational standpoint, which lead a kid to commit suicide because he thought he was liable for something like 750k in losses, when it was actually closer to like 10k. Having said that, if he had an actual understanding of what he was doing, or just asked around online, it was a known issue. The execution side of things just results in financial losses greater than there should be.
Practically impossible to contact in 'emergency' situations-- there was what was suspected to be some kind of security breach that caused several hundred people over the span of a few days to have their accounts liquidated. People saw the transactions going on in real time, but there was no way to contact the brokerage to have them lock it down until the situation could be investigated... people had to use the standard contact form which yielded the equivalent of a 'Your call is important to us. We'll get back to you never.' If you watched the congressional hearing, the CEO claimed they made great strides and they now have a contact number... he rep called the number, live on the hearing, and it was an explanation of how to submit a message online.
A lot of sloppy internal reporting. When I transferred out to TDA, it took forever because, according to TDA, there were numerous inconsistencies including confusion over assets being recorded as purchased on margin despite there being cash available.
I will say that they are good at the whole "gamification" thing... but part of that is having an interface that's really easy and clean to read. Despite transferring my assets out months ago, I still keep a dollar in it to keep my account live in perpetuity just because it's the cleanest interface to use to monitor my holdings at a glance. I personally don't think gamification is an issue-- it's an interface that's clean, simple, and their target market appreciates it. Sometimes I want a fully detailed chart with custom analysis on it, sometimes I just want a nondescript red/green line.
They can't save WSB from itself (Score:2)
The average Robinhood user is either a WSB trader or cut from the same cloth. They genuinely believe Tesla is worth more than any auto company on Earth despite the fact that it has some very troubling financial and quality issues (and its competition is starting to catch up). They genuinely believe that Gamestop squeezes to the moon are still possible even though Gamestop is about to sell another 3.5M shares.
For an interesting indictment of their mentality, look at how WSB as a community reacted to silver i
Re: (Score:2)
New old ways to steal (Score:2)
So... this is the old "modified the code to capture the fractional dollars in the 4th digit and route them to his account" story that I first heard in reference to 1960s data processing (and 1970s, and 1980s... Although it may have been around in the accounting machine days of the 1920s as well) - except this Robinhood company just went ahead and implemented that illegal algorithm right out in the open as part of their base code? And just steals those fractional dollars out of its customers' accounts? An
Re: (Score:3)
Not really stealing from their clients:
Fractional shares are a ting nowadays because people might want to invest in Amazon, but can't afford the ~3000 for a single share. The problem is that, institutionally, shares are only traded in whole number increments, so if you buy 10% of AMZN, what you're actually buying (ostensibly, there are even more layers of abstraction and obfuscation) is a 10% interest of one share; somebody else affiliated to you has to own the entire share to extend that 10% to you, which
Re: (Score:2)
Which is exactly the scenario I described, with an overlay of terminology from a different industry. There are two widely used databases (at least) with NUMBER datatypes that implement true deci
Re: (Score:2)
Ah, I get it, sorry. I was reading it as a parallel between having fractions of a cent of interest being stolen drawn as a parallel to fractions of a share being stolen, not just another place to apply the good ol' gimmick of a limited number of significant digits.
Hmm: "entice and induce inexperienced customers" (Score:2)
Interesting for MA to mention this seeing as they have casinos and state lotteries. Many people view such as "investments".
I guess State offered and supported programs that target "inexperienced customers" are OK, the State sees direct money...
The fractional trading is probably an actual rule violation.
Re: (Score:2)
Delware is being hipocritcal (Score:2)
If you regulate RH then you need to also curb other forms of gambling. Deleware is saying, we don't like people taking risks and losing money, well people will do that anyway with other forms of gaming. Don't come down on RH for risky behavior if your going to allow it on other platforms.
Deleware allows sports betting, so it's either they are for gambling or against it and by the laws they've passed it appears that gambling is ok. By calling RH gambling or gaming, Deleware already allows this.
Gamestop? (Score:2)
And yet Robin-hood did exactly that when they suspended purchases of Gamestop stock. Oh the irony.
MA is the home of Fidelity, FYI (Score:2)
It this corruption? Probably not, but it is worth keeping in mind we host some major financial players who compete with RobinHood....it's also an affluent progressive state that wants to protect it's people, just like how California leads in auto emissions, MA wants to lead in consumer protection. I'd err on the side of MA heart being in the right place, but I never forget the major companies we host here & who important they are to th
Re: (Score:2)
so....we're training AI? I'll contribute: The parenthetical panda was while swimming 3 tense baby! Pachyderm, reticulated running green would HAVE pop tart Japanese. Troy-bilt?