Times Colonist

Brokerage glitches draw complaints as pot stocks take plunge

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TORONTO — Traders using at least two major online discount brokerage platforms are complainin­g of sporadic outages and expressing frustratio­n that the latest glitch has tied their hands amidst a broad plunge in marijuana stocks.

Clients of TD Bank’s WebBroker and Royal Bank’s RBC Direct Investing platforms have again taken to social media to gripe about problems, after facing similar issues in recent days.

A TD spokesman said “unpreceden­ted” trading volume continues to drive some intermitte­nt delays for its online and mobile WebBroker clients, and the bank rolled out a broad update on Tuesday night to increase the platform’s capacity.

“Our technical teams are working quickly to resolve this issue,” said spokesman Paolo Pasquini. “We sincerely apologize for this inconvenie­nce.”

RBC spokesman AJ Goodman had a similar message, saying “heavy trading volumes” were to blame for service issues, and that a fix was in the works.

Brandon Colwell, an economics student and WebBroker user, said he has lost at least $8,000 as a result of the latest outage. The problems faced Thursday, as well as the outages on Dec. 29 and on Jan. 2, appear to be coinciding with surges in trading activity in the cannabis sector. “This is the worst pullback I’ve seen in the cannabis sector in well over a year. It’s incredible that these are correspond­ing,” he said.

Several marijuana companies took a major hit Thursday — with shares of Canada’s biggest licensed producer Canopy Growth down as much as 19 per cent — after the Associated Press reported U.S. attorney general Jeff Sessions planned to rescind an Obama-era policy that allowed legalized pot to flourish in states south of the border.

Under U.S. federal law it remains illegal to cultivate, distribute, or possess the drug but the Obama administra­tion had issued a guidance in 2013 known as the “Cole Memorandum” which suggested the federal government would not intervene in states where the drug is legal. More than two dozen states have legalized medical marijuana, and California is the latest state to legalize the recreation­al use of weed, as of Jan. 1. Later Thursday, Sessions released an official memo rescinding the Cole Memorandum.

Many Canadian marijuana companies saw double-digit plunges in their share price on the news, before regaining some ground by the afternoon.

And at least four cannabisre­lated firms listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange were temporaril­y halted, according to the Investment Industry Regulatory Organizati­on of Canada, due to the single-stock circuit breaker rule which limits sudden price swings of stocks.

Watching this brisk activity in the marijuana sector was particular­ly frustratin­g for bookkeeper and WebBroker user Pat Martin, who was unable to make any trades online. “They were crashing so I was looking to sell, and then buy back in when it bottomed out. But obviously I couldn’t do that at all. … It’s just an endless issue,” she said.

It’s unclear whether the brisk activity in the marijuana sector is connected to the spike in trading volumes and brokerage problems, but the timing is unfortunat­e. On Dec. 29, when these brokerage clients began experienci­ng glitches, IIROC temporaril­y halted trading on several Canadian-listed pot companies.

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