San Francisco Chronicle

Investors ride artificial high with free apps

- By Joseph N. DiStefano

Free stocktradi­ng smartphone apps like Robinhood, Firstrade and Stockpile are attracting a wave of new investors, and are helping to prop up stock markets despite the headwinds of the coronaviru­s.

Alongside such familiar stocks as Amazon, Facebook and Google, their investment­s have boosted shares of some obscure and moneylosin­g companies, trading records show.

“It’s educationa­l, it’s affordable — you can buy fractions of shares for just a few dollars — and it’s a good time,” said Karen HartleyNag­le, president of New Castle County Council in Delaware, who says she has recommende­d Robinhood and Stockpile to her four young adult children as a way to learn about investment­s.

But investment profession­als like Matt Topley, president of Lansing Street Investment

Advisers in Ambler, Pa., warn that neophyte app investors are riding an artificial high. They’re jumping into markets that are stimulated by record government spending on subsidized loans to businesses, extra unemployme­nt checks, and Federal Reserve purchases of trillions of dollars in investor debt.

He compared the rush of new investors through free apps like Robinhood to the day traders who fed the dotcom boom of the late 1990s, before the market’s 2001 collapse. “This will not last long,” he predicted.

Of course, free trading apps are a threat to pros. Buying investment­s used to mean hiring advisers — like Topley’s, or Wall Street giants such as Goldman Sachs, or big discounter­s like Vanguard Group. How can apps trade for free?

Robinhood says it gets paid by referring customers to a bank so they borrow to buy more. It also collects interest on clients’ uninvested cash even at today’s very low rates, and it sells their trade orders to big wholesale trading firms like Virtu Financial and Citadel Investment­s, which make money on the spread between what buyers and sellers pay.

During the coronaviru­s shutdowns, when so many people are home, “there’s more opportunit­y to trade during the day,” said Douglas Cifu, CEO of Virtu, in an investor conference call after posting record sales and profit last month. He said orders have increased substantia­lly. “When you can do something for free, I guess people do it more often.”

Robinhood, started by a pair of Stanford grads in 2013 and backed by more than $700 million from venture capital giant New Enterprise Associates and other investors, has become a special focus of market watchers. It claims more than 13 million users, and its trades are tracked and posted by another startup, Robintrack, founded by an undergradu­ate at Valparaiso University in Indiana in 2018.

In December, Robinhood agreed to pay $1.25 million to settle accusation­s by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority that it had violated industry rules in 2016 and 2017 by failing to help customers trade stocks for better prices than offered by the trading firms paying Robinhood for business. The company denied wrongdoing but agreed to pay the fine to end the dispute.

Last week, Robinhood agreed to beef up the informatio­n it provides to options investors after a 20yearold customer received an options accounting statement he thought showed a loss and ended his life.

A list of the top trades by Robinhood users for the week ending June 18 includes marketlead­ing stocks such as Apple and Amazon — but also moneylosin­g firms such as Urban One, which operates radio stations designed for African Americans, and Ideanomics, which sells electricve­hicle systems in China and has invested in the Delaware Board of Trade.

While Apple’s and Amazon’s popularity with Robinhood users mirrors their long popularity with investors generally, Robinhood users have logged more than 10,000 early June trades each in Urban One and Ideanomics, which have not shown the stronger profits associated with higher stock values.

It is a sign of “fear of missing out,” which might not be related to intrinsic company value, wrote Matthew Fox in Business Insider in a review of recent Robintrack data.

Urban One traded at between $1 and $2 per share this year until this month, when the spread of the Black Lives Matter protests following the death in police custody of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s sparked a rush of investor interest in African Americanfo­cused companies, according to Barron’s magazine.

The stock, first traded in 1999, hit an alltime high above $48 on June 19 — the Juneteenth holiday marking the end of slavery in 1865 in Texas — at trading volume far above its usual level. The high was brief: It had lost half its value by June 24 though it remained far above earlier 2020 levels.

Urban One was for several days worth more than the nation’s secondlarg­est radio company, Philadelph­ia’s Entercom. This was so even though Entercom had more than three times Urban One’s total sales last year, in an industry suffering a collapse in advertisin­g revenue.

Ideanomics had been what traders call a penny stock, because its value has been less than $1 for most of this year. But after the New York company said that it had arranged to sell electricca­r systems in China and was making other asset purchases and sales, its stock was picked up by Robinhood users, and its shares rose above $3 for the first time since 2018.

But HartleyNag­le, who had reviewed the company’s financial reports since the previous county government lent $3 million in 2015 to the Delaware Board of Trade (which Ideanomics later acquired), knew Ideanomics has not been profitable.

Last fall, County Executive Matt Meyer rejected an Ideanomics request to accept its lowvalued shares in lieu of cash. He had no comment on the sudden improvemen­t in the stock price since it became a Robinhood darling. Ideanomics officials also declined to comment beyond the company’s public filings.

 ?? Tyler O’Neill / Dreamstime ?? Free stocktradi­ng smartphone apps are attracting a wave of new investors.
Tyler O’Neill / Dreamstime Free stocktradi­ng smartphone apps are attracting a wave of new investors.

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