The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

GameStop and other stocks targeted by Reddit users plummet

Robinhood and other brokerages restrict trades, prompting an outcry from investors and lawmakers

January 28, 2021 at 4:28 p.m. EST
An epic battle is unfolding on Wall Street, with a cast of characters clashing over the fate of GameStop, a struggling chain of video game retail stores.

Shares of GameStop and other companies plummeted in regular trading Thursday, even as leading brokerages moved to limit trading in the stocks — a decision that infuriated lawmakers and the ordinary retail investors who had used those stocks to wage a populist war against big Wall Street hedge funds.

Those investors had been coordinating on a Reddit message board to send the prices of those stocks soaring for most of this week, inflicting painful losses on hedge funds that bet the shares would drop. The narrative of an online army of ordinary investors waging war against well-heeled financial firms has transfixed Wall Street this week.

But on Thursday, many of those stocks were sold off, despite some users of the Reddit message board pleading with people to hold onto their investments. GameStop stock closed down 44 percent. Other stocks boosted by investors on the Reddit message board also cratered, with movie theater giant AMC Entertainment dropping 57 percent; BlackBerry shedding 42 percent; and Nokia falling 29 percent.

What you need to know about GameStop’s stock price chaos

As the trading frenzy continued, Robinhood and Interactive Brokers, two of the most popular online trading apps for retail investors, announced that they would restrict users’ trading in the stocks seeing the most action. Those moves came after TD Ameritrade earlier in the week said it would impose restrictions.

But shares of the targeted companies rallied in after-hours trading, after Robinhood said starting Friday it will allow “limited buys” of the names it had restricted — GameStop, AMC, BlackBerry, Bed Bath & Beyond, the retailer Express, the headphone maker Koss, Nokia and Naked Brand Group. “We’ll continue to monitor the situation and may make adjustments as needed,” the company said in a blog post announcing the move.

Shares of GameStop more than doubled during the week of Jan. 25, as message boards aimed at amateur investors continued to hype the stock. (Video: Reuters)

Robinhood’s initial decision sparked fury among the app’s users — Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy, a champion of retail investors, said Robinhood would “never recover from this” — and caught the attention of an unlikely pair of lawmakers.

GameStop, AMC shares surge after Redditt users lead chaotic revolt against big Wall Street funds

In a tweet, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) protested the trading app’s move “to block retail investors from purchasing stock while hedge funds are freely able to trade the stock as they see fit.” Ocasio-Cortez, a member of the House Financial Services Committee, indicated that a hearing on the issue might be necessary. The lawmaker also said she planned to discuss GameStop and issues related to retail trading Thursday night on Twitch, a popular video game streaming platform.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), who frequently clashes with Ocasio-Cortez online, endorsed her statement.

The top Democrats on the House and Senate committees overseeing the financial services industry both said they intend to hold hearings on the matter.

“People on Wall Street only care about the rules when they’re the ones getting hurt,” Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), incoming chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said in a statement. “It’s time for the SEC and Congress to make the economy work for everyone not just Wall Street.”

Rep. Maxine Waters, (D-Calif.), chairwoman of the House Financial Services Committee, said in statement that “hedge funds have a long history of predatory conduct.” She said she will hold a hearing to examine issues raised by trading in GameStop’s stock and others, “with a focus on short selling, online trading platforms, gamification and their systemic impact on our capital markets and retail investors.”

The whipsawing market action has forced the companies facilitating it to scramble. The Reddit message board, WallStreetBets, briefly went private Wednesday night. In a post after unlocking the forum shortly thereafter, its moderators wrote that it had “grown to the kind of size we only dreamed of in the time it takes to get a bad nights sleep. We’ve got so many comments and submissions that we can’t possibly even read them all, let alone act on them as moderators.”

Meanwhile, at least seven retail brokerage firms — including TD Ameritrade, Robinhood Crypto, E-Trade, Charles Schwab, Fidelity Investments, Vanguard and Interactive Brokers — experienced service disruptions Thursday morning, which many attributed to higher volume, although they did not specially cite the GameStop activity.

The website Downdetector reported log-in and website issues for some of the firms, as well as for Reddit, starting after 9 a.m. Eastern time.

The big losses in the stocks targeted by WallStreetBets came on one of the best days for the overall markets. The Dow Jones industrial average rose about 2 percent, erasing much of the losses it experienced earlier in the week.

Thursday’s backlash against the brokerages came after a rough stretch for Robinhood. The trading platform last month agreed to a $65 million civil penalty to resolve charges that it misled clients about how it makes money, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced.

The SEC announcement came a day after Massachusetts regulators accused the trading app of predatory marketing “without regard for the best interest of its customers.” In the complaint, Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin (D) alleged that Robinhood uses “gamification strategies” — such as displaying confetti on screen whenever users make a trade — to lure young and inexperienced customers into risky stock trading. Regulators attribute the platform’s frequent outages to flawed infrastructure.

Small investors, including some who bought stock in GameStop and other brands targeted by the Reddit message board, reacted angrily to the suspension of trading by Robinhood and other brokerages.

Daniel Inskeep, 32, of Los Angeles, a full-time YouTuber who runs a personal finance channel, said he has been monitoring WallStreetBets for more than a month and reentered the GameStop share game last week. Inskeep said he bought in because he wanted to bank on the bullish sentiment. He also purchased stock in BlackBerry but for different reasons: He thinks the company’s patents and technology for electric vehicles signal sustainability.

Inskeep said he’s frustrated with Thursday’s pushback from brokerage firms, three of which (Robinhood, TD Ameritrade and WeBull) he uses, as well as media coverage of the volatility. He said such actions give an advantage to bigger institutional power at the expense of inexperienced retail investors.

“There’s nothing wrong with taking advantage of a short squeeze when positions are being met,” he said. “It’s setting retail investors up to not win in a situation that they discovered themselves, and they’re taking advantage of poor decision-making from hedge fund investments, and now all of a sudden the tables are turned.”

Frank Merentino, 40, a carpenter in New Jersey, said he sold all of his other holdings and bought 16 shares of GameStop stock last week through Robinhood when he saw news the stock was trending. He said he joined the Reddit message board to keep up with the saga.

Thursday morning, Merentino said he watched the company’s stock drop in premarket trading and tried to buy more shares. He said Robinhood canceled the transaction and flashed the message, “Order to sell has been confirmed at $140 per share.” Merentino said he tried to hit cancel but the sale went through and he lost more than $2,000.

He said the app took the money from his bank account but won’t transfer the sale, so he’s stuck and can’t move to other brokerage firms. “I just got on this GameStop thing out of luck really, and now I got screwed,” he said. “I’m not an expert of Wall Street stuff, but I know if I walked down the street and took something out of somebody’s pocket, I know where I’d be.”

One Twitter user pointed out Thursday what she sees as a double standard: “A bunch of senators dumped their stock before coronavirus because they knew it was coming before the general public, but I can’t [buy] $15 worth of AMC stock because Ameritrade said it’s not fair.”

Hamza Shaban contributed to this report.

GameStop: What you need to know

The latest: The CEOs of Reddit, Citadel, Robinhood, Melvin Capital and the Reddit user who helped set off the GameStop stock frenzy testified before the House Financial Services Committee.

Read their testimony here: Reddit | Citadel | Robinhood | Melvin Capital | Keith Patrick Gill aka ‘Roaring Kitty’

FAQ: What you need to know about GameStop’s stock price chaos

Retail: GameStop is still struggling to stay afloat, despite record stock surge

Cashing in: A 10-year-old cashes in his GameStop shares

The meteoric rise of r/wallstreetbets: WallStreetBets, the Reddit forum at the center of the GameStop stock rally

AMC: AMC itself may have been bailed out by WallStreetBets

Reactions: Billionaire blasts ‘Robinhood market’ as Jon Stewart, others herald GameStop stock rebellion