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The fake GameStop revolution

When Robin Hood is the Pied Piper: A new cautionary tale of the meme-stock market bubble

- • RUSS MITCHELL (Los Angeles Times/TNS)

Remember last year, when pals in their bedrooms ganged up on the Robinhood app, pumped meme stocks like GameStop to absurd heights, got crazy rich and beat Wall Street at its own game?

If that’s the way you remember it, you’re wrong. Although, you can be forgiven, given how much of the media spun the story as if it were David vs. Goliath, the little guy wielding a social media slingshot to stick it to the big man.

Spencer Jakab sets the record straight in his new book The Revolution that Wasn’t: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” Some little guys did get rich. Most lost their money and many saw their entire savings cleared out, meager as they might have been. So guess who profited most from the meme stock craze? That’s right, Wall Street.

Everyone knows how stock bubble stories like this usually end, but Jakab moves this particular morality play into new territory. His thrumming narrative paints a post-COVID-19 picture of American greed driven by social media and a variety of accomplice­s: Addictive, pervasive technology, click-bait media, generation­al resentment, clueless and craven politician­s, feckless regulators, billionair­es who use Twitter to manipulate markets, and much more.

The basic story: Young men, most ages 18 to 35, were stuck at home due to COVID-19 with little to do. New smartphone apps, like Robinhood, offered no-fee stock trading so that playing the game was quick, easy and cheap. Ever-rising stock prices, fed by the Federal Reserve Board’s hedge-fund bailout and mad money printing approach to monetary policy, meant the only sucker’s game was not buying stocks.

Forums like Wall Street Bets on Reddit provided a tribal gathering ground for this new investor class. Moving quickly past the stock-tips online forums of old, the players began swarming and flash-mobbing specific stocks. That sent torpid old companies like GameStop, the bricks-and-mortar games retailer, on a rocket ride. From a low price of $2.17 a share in 2020, GameStop went vertical and hit a high of $483 in March 2021 before it plunged back to Earth. (It remains preternatu­rally lofty, though, at around $110 a share.)

The forums were (and still are) filled with scorn toward Wall Street. The mobs intentiona­lly targeted hedge funds that sold stocks short – a strategy that makes money when a stock price goes down. Some of those funds suffered true pain.

Short sellers represent a tiny part of Wall Street, if they can be considered a part of Wall Street at all. The big players did just fine. So did the Robinhood app, which worked tightly with Wall Street to extract money from customers by selling their orders to clearingho­uses like Citadel Securities.

Robinhood also fronted money to its customers, naive or not, through fee-producing margin loans. Those loans can be leveraged into outsized profits, but when things go bad, the investor can be totally wiped out. As well, Robinhood made it easy for neophytes to trade complex derivative­s, once the province of the financiall­y savvy. The company claimed, with some justificat­ion, that it was democratiz­ing financial investing.

However, this democracy, by making trading easy and even addictive, is a gift to Wall Street, whose multi-billion-dollar brokerage business makes money every time someone trades a stock. Easy apps like Robinhood boost trading volume. According to Jakab, the average Robinhoode­r trades stocks eight times every day.

In Jakab’s assessment, Robinhood doesn’t take from the rich and give to the poor. Its founders, he notes, are billionair­es. Ironic, that the traders they rabble-roused grew up during the 2008 financial crisis, seeing parents lose their houses while financial fraudsters walked away scot-free. Now, as Jakab makes clear, they’ve lost their own nest eggs after taking Robinhood loans – balloon mortgages for a new decade.

Jakab is a former investment banker who currently writes the Wall Street Journal’s “Heard on the Street” column; he knows what he’s talking about. He’s skilled at translatin­g concepts like puts, calls, short sales and gamma squeezes into language most anyone can understand – a true gift. He doesn’t especially vilify Wall Street, understand­ing that it’s behaving as anyone should expect it to.

He does aim some scorn at Congress, which held hearings after the Robinhood app was so overwhelme­d by trading volume it had to temporaril­y cut its customers off. Representa­tives from both parties posed as protectors of the little guy, either pretending not to understand the facts on the ground or, more frightenin­g, genuinely missing the point.

Like so much reporting in recent years, Jakab’s book is both depressing and necessary. Amid rapid change, Americans continue to lose faith in even a modicum of financial fair play and in political leaders’ ability to cope. Sometimes they turn to new shiny objects in hopes of beating the system. Jakab’s book makes it clear that the endorphin rush of novelty, hyper-fueled by social media, is probably a dead end; it certainly won’t change the power structure.

That seems to be the case with cryptocurr­ency and other new forms of money, as well. Those enticed to enter the game need to ask themselves, who benefits from crypto’s volatility? It’s not the suckers who win big, it’s exchanges, such as the company that sponsors what used to be called the Staples Center. Do those companies really believe NFTs will be worth more in a couple years from now than they are today?

Anybody who buys and sells stocks and anyone who invests in anything old or new, should read this book.

 ?? (Dado Ruvic/Reuters) ?? A 3D-PRINTED Robinhood logo and $1 banknotes in front of a displayed GameStop logo form a trio.
(Dado Ruvic/Reuters) A 3D-PRINTED Robinhood logo and $1 banknotes in front of a displayed GameStop logo form a trio.

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