San Antonio Express-News

Traders pump silver as Gamestop retreats

- By Hamza Shaban

Silver surged nearly 7 percent Monday as online investor communitie­s adapted their Gamestop playbook to the precious metal, a strategy that sent shorted companies soaring last week and battered the Wall Street hedge funds that had bet against those stocks.

Gamestop sank 30.8 percent, to $225.01 a share, Monday even as the broader market advanced. The video game retailer’s stock popped 400 percent last week and has seen an 18-fold jump since December.

U.S. stocks — which tumbled last week amid anxiety over the frenzied trading that’s being cheered on by the Reddit forum Wallstreet­bets and other online communitie­s — turned things around on Monday. The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 229.29 points, or 0.8 percent, to 30,211.91. The S&P 500 gained 59.62 points ,or 1.6 percent, to settle at 3,773.86. The tech-heavy Nasdaq climbed 332.70 points or 2.6 percent, to end the session at 13,403.39.

Big Tech helped spark that positive momentum. On Monday, Google and Ford announced a sixyear partnershi­p to develop technology for the automaker’s vehicles. Starting in 2023, Ford and Lincoln models at all price points will be equipped with Google apps and services, powered by Android. Google was also named as Ford’s go-to provider for cloud services.

Silver became the big topic on investor forums, with enthusiast­s asserting that the metal is undervalue­d and that heightened demand will drive up prices. Critics described the spike as a distractio­n and a financial trap.

Precious metals are typically seen as haven assets, especially in times of economic uncertaint­y and wild swings in the stock market. The assets are seen as a buffer against inflation and lower interest rates; they tend to be relatively stable over long periods of time and not easily dragged down by the fluctuatio­n of other currencies. Silver has additional uses as an industrial metal in electronic­s, adding to the potential for future gains.

Ed Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA, said silver’s rally is partly driven by retail investors who are noticing Gamestop’s surge slow down and are looking to pivot to what’s next — in this case, silver, which has long struggled to win appeal over the rise of cryptocurr­encies but is now catching the attention of a new wave of traders.

“Everyone was scrambling to say, ‘OK, well, if Gamestop is pretty much done, what’s next?’” Moya said. “There was this belief that, ‘Wow, we can really cause a disruption here. If we can send our army of traders to buy silver coins because they wouldn’t be able to keep up with demand, it would have this domino effect on prices.’”

But some members of Wallstreet­bets tried to wave off investors from buying silver, arguing that the rally would only benefit hedge fund Citadel Advisors, which owns 6 million shares of the precious metal, Bloomberg reported. Citadel has come under scrutiny from Reddit investors — who accused the fund of pressuring brokerage firm Robinhood to limit Gamestop trading — during last week’s rally. Citadel and Robinhood spokespeop­le have denied the accusation.

It’s unclear how heavily the retail investor rebellion has affected institutio­nal Wall Street. But after Melvin Capital Management, one of the original hedge funds that shorted Gamestop, sank 30 percent after the company’s stock rally, separate funds Citadel and Point72 provided a $2.75 billion bailout.

But Moya said it’s not just Reddit users who are driving the commodity’s rally. Hedge fund managers started jumping in to silver last week and the beginning of Monday’s trading session, he said.

“Even if this retail frenzy ends, there’s still a belief that silver was going to go higher because of the reflation trade, because of the unpreceden­ted global monetary fiscal stimulus efforts,” he said.

Robinhood, a popular trading platform, said in a blog post Monday it raised $2.4 billion from investors to help expand the business amid the burst in trading activity, bringing total funding since last week to $3.4 billion.

Ribbit Capital led the latest investment round, Robinhood said, with contributi­ons from existing investors including ICONIQ, Andreessen Horowitz and Sequoia.

“This funding is a strong sign of confidence from investors and will help us build for the future and continue to serve people through the exponentia­l growth we’ve seen this year,” the company said in the announceme­nt.

As of Monday afternoon, Robinhood had pared down its list of restricted stocks to eight: Gamestop, AMC, Blackberry, Koss, Express, Nokia, Genius Brands Internatio­nal and Naked Brand Group. The trading app was criticized by business leaders and lawmakers from both parties last week for its efforts to rein in dozens of stocks caught up in the trading frenzy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States