The SEC is reviewing changes to share trading after an explosion of interest in meme stocks, including the use of payment for order flow

AP333575799267
SEC Chairman Gary Gensler.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is looking at changing rules around share trading after the day-trader frenzy around meme stocks showed equity markets may not be as efficient as they could.

Chairman Gary Gensler said Wednesday he has asked the regulator’s staff to submit recommendations on a range of market rules, including the high fees paid to Wall Street brokers for executing small-investor orders and the rise of commission-free brokerage apps.

Their recommendations will address the issue of payment for order flow, or the compensation online brokers receive when stock orders are routed to third-party firms like Virtu Financial and Citadel Securities in order to carry out the trade.

Shares in Virtu fell 7.7% after Gensler’s comments. The high-speed trader handles about one-third of individual investors’ order flow in US stocks, according to the Wall Street Journal. Virtu’s stock rallied this year alongside the meme-stock frenzy, while Citadel Securities isn’t publicly traded.

Gensler previously called out popular investing apps like Robinhood that have introduced millions of amateur investors to stocks through the lure of zero commissions. He criticized the company for encouraging the gamification of the stock market, and for not doing enough to educate its user base of the risks associated with investing.

Robinhood’s business model, which operates on a system of payment for order flow, allows it to offer so-called “commission-free trading.” But some lawmakers have called for increased examination into the potential conflict of interest it presents its users.

The SEC will look into this practice, that uses phone alerts and other notifications to get investors to trade more, Gensler said at a Piper Sandler conference in New York.

“The question is whether our equity markets are as efficient as they could be, in light of the technological changes and recent developments,” he said.

Most of these issues came to regulatory attention after day traders used social platforms like Reddit to bid up prices of heavily-shorted stocks like GameStop, fuelling an over 1,200% surge in the video-game retailer’s stock in January.

More recently, a string of so-called meme stocks including AMC, Bed Bath & Beyond, and BlackBerry saw $1.27 billion in retail investor inflows in the past two weeks. That matches the peak of GameStop’s short squeeze earlier in the year.

New SEC rules could impact the business models that online brokerages use, meaning Robinhood and its competitors would have to operate under new guidelines.

“Brokers profit when investors trade,” Gensler said. “For those brokers who have these arrangements – and not all do – higher trading volume generates more payment-for-order flow. What makes the current zero-commission brokerage environment different is that investors do not see their costs as they’re executing trades, so they may perceive them as free.”

Read More: An award-winning software analyst of nearly 20 years breaks down why these 4 beaten-down stocks are set to soar in the months ahead – including 1 with 163% upside

Read the original article on Business Insider

A rotation into cannabis stocks by retail investors has a lot more room to run as the latest meme-stock rally fades, research firm says

Tilray cannabis marijuana
A worker smiles as she shows cannabis plants at the Tilray factory.

  • Cannabis stocks may be the next area of attention for retail investors as a recent rally in meme stocks fizzles, says Vanda Research.
  • Inflows for Tilray and Sundial Growers have picked up this week.
  • “Retail purchases of meme stocks probably peaked on Wednesday,” said Vanda.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

The meme-stocks rally that’s propelled AMC Entertainment up more than 2,200% so far this year is showing signs of exhaustion, but a recent pickup in buying of cannabis stocks including Tilray suggests that space could be the next center of attention for retail investors, according to a research firm.

“Retail purchases of meme stocks probably peaked on Wednesday,” said Vanda Research on Friday, noting a slowdown in net inflows into shares of AMC, the top recipient of retail investment money in recent weeks. Its rally has carried through to GameStop, BlackBerry and other stocks favored by retail investors active on social media such as Reddit’s Wall Street Bets platform. Vanda monitors retail trading activity in more than 9,000 US stocks and ETFs.

Meanwhile, inflows of $28.6 million into shares of cannabis companies Tilray and Sundial Growers on Thursday were the strongest since earlier rallies in the first quarter of the year. That marked the first clear signs of a rotation out of meme stocks, said Vanda. There was also a significant pick-up in retail flow on Friday for Tilray, Sundial and Cronos, three of the largest cannabis stocks traded in the US.

Meme stocks bounced back into the spotlight for retail investors in late May as bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies were crashing. AMC shares began to surge after major shareholder Dalian Wanda Group sold almost all of its remaining stake in the company. Redditors cheered the newly available shares and flexed their newfound weight in the market.

While meme stocks are still heftier in value than weeks before, the rally was starting to fizzle with AMC shares pulling back. AMC on Wednesday had $66 million in new inflows, less than half of the $136 million mln it had averaged in the previous two sessions, said Vanda. BlackBerry picked up some of the slack by drawing in $110 million for its largest day of retail buying in 2021.

However, “as opposed to BlackBerry, we think the rotation into cannabis stocks has a lot more room to run,” said Vanda, adding that Sundial and Tilray were the fourth and seventh-most active tickers on WallStreetBets forums on Thursday.

Tilray and Sundial jumped during the week after Amazon said its public policy team will back the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act of 2021. The MORE act would, among other actions, end criminal penalties for anyone who sells cannabis in states where it’s legal.

“Despite the low chances that the Act is passed in the Senate (due to the filibuster), increasing media coverage is likely to attract the attention of the average retail investor,” said Ben Onatibia, a senior strategist at Vanda.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Ask an analyst – our columnist answers your questions about how novice traders can thrive in financial markets

Stock Market Bubble
A trader blows bubble gum during the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on August 1, 2019, in New York City.

  • Insider’s new “Ask An Analyst” column offers novice investors advice on how to succeed with stocks.
  • Ryan Paisey is a veteran with nearly 20 years’ experience on the markets.
  • Find out below how you can submit him questions.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

Retail investors – everyday people who buy stocks – are more important than ever in trading.

In January, Redditors saved bricks-and-mortar video game chain GameStop from being shorted, tanking Wall Street veterans in the process.

They have since also piled into cryptocurrencies, driving “meme token” Dogecoin to record highs and pumping up the value of anything from silver to lumber.

Hedge funds can no longer look down on them as people who follow the leader.

But lowering the entry barrier to the stock market has meant a lot of novices are trading money they cannot afford to lose.

Insider is launching Ask An Analyst – an advice column that aims to make you a better trader with straight forward responses to basic questions.

Read the column: How to find stocks with the most growth potential

This isn’t about listing stock picks. If you’ve wondered “how much research should I be doing on a stock? What am I doing right? What am I doing wrong?” this is the column for you.

Our columnist is Ryan Paisey, a veteran trader who has been in markets for nearly 20 years, and runs trader news service PriapusIQ.

“For too many players, the basic knowledge of the games we play are lacking, they are more concerned with guessing ‘up or down’ than understanding the basics which can immeasurably help improve their decision making process,” he says.

“I’m not here to tell you how to trade. I am here to share my 20 years of experience with those that have questions which only experience can answer.”

To submit your question, email jsommers@insider.com with “Ask An Analyst” in the subject line.

Read the original article on Business Insider

New rules could tackle the ‘gamification’ of trading on popular apps following GameStop, SEC chief Gary Gensler says

AP333575799267
Gary Gensler is the new head of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

New rules may be needed to tackle the “gamification” of trading on popular apps, which can prompt users to make bad investing decisions, according to the new head of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Gary Gensler said in written testimony to Congress on Wednesday that many of the US’s regulations on trading were created before fast and commission-free apps started to dominate the retail investing landscape.

In particular, Gensler expressed concern about the “gamification” of retail trading. Apps are increasingly using features like points, rewards, leaderboards, bonuses and competitions to boost user engagement, he said.

Gensler is set to appear before the House Committee on Financial Services on Thursday, as part of its investigation into January’s GameStop saga, which saw retail traders unite to pump up the video game store’s stock.

Some lawmakers have become concerned about the influence of Robinhood, the commission-free trading app that has boomed in popularity and was at the centre of January’s volatility.

The new boss of the SEC – the powerful regulator that oversees US financial markets – said the gamification of trading could be costly to users.

“If we watch a movie that a streaming app recommends and don’t like it, we might lose a couple of hours of our evening,” he said.

“Following the wrong prompt on a trading app, however, could have a substantial effect on a saver’s financial position. A big loss could have immediate implications for the app user’s ability to afford their rent or pay other important bills. A small loss now could compound into a significant loss at retirement.

“Many of these features encourage investors to trade more. Some academic studies suggest more active trading or even day trading results in lower returns for the average trader.”

Gensler said these issues may require new rules. “Many of our regulations were largely written before these recent technologies and communication practices became prevalent. I think we need to evaluate our rules, and we may find that we need to freshen up our rule set.”

The House will begin the third of its hearings into the GameStop saga on Thursday. It is particularly focused on the impact of modern trading apps and the power they can have, after many of them suspended trading and shut out users during January’s market volatility.

Apps like Robinhood argue their popular and easy-to-use platforms have broken down barriers to investing.

Speaking before the House during an earlier part of the hearing in February, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev said: “The mobile app provides the intuitive experience customers want, while also providing them with tools and information to learn about investing and keep tabs on their finances.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

Robinhood traders boosted the value of the stock market in the depths of the pandemic, but the rise of retail traders also means ‘extraordinary volatility’ may be the new normal, study says

Robinhood on cellphone
Robinhood app

Robinhood traders boosted the market’s recovery by adding 1% to the aggregate US stock market valuation in the second quarter of 2020, a study by the Swiss Finance Institute found. Traders also added 20% to the value of small-cap stocks.

The study, first reported by Bloomberg, also revealed that Robinhood traders had an impact five times the size of their assets in the second quarter. Retail traders on the platform, according to researchers Philippe van der Beck and Coralie Jaunin, also alleviated the stock market crash during the first quarter of last year by 0.6%. The paper was published in SSRN, a publisher of scholarly and academic research, in January 2021.

“The price impact of Robinhood traders is concentrated towards small-cap stocks and the consumer staples industry.” the pair wrote. “However, they are able to affect the price of some large companies, which are being held primarily by passive investors.”

The pair concluded that individual retail investors react more strongly to price changes.

“We show that when institutions react sluggishly to non-fundamental price changes, the mechanism stifles and retail demand shocks can have substantial impacts on stock prices,” the pair wrote.

Moving forward, the researchers found that if the role of Robinhood, “facilitated by novel fintech solutions,” continues to grow, the “extraordinary volatility observed during the pandemic may turn out to be the new normal.”

“The prominent role of Robinhood traders in driving returns evokes concerns about the future role of retail trading in equity markets,” the pair said.

The rapid rise of retail investors has been a powerful force in the stock market, enabled by a range of factors including commission-free trading, distribution of government stimulus checks, and heightened pandemic boredom as many people continue to work from home.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The next stimulus will drive another surge of retail investing in the stock market, Bank of America says

GettyImages 1291817095
Robinhood is hugely popular among day traders, putting it at the center of the GameStop frenzy

  • The next round of stimulus aid will drive another surge of retail investing, Bank of America said.
  • BofA data shows the last two spikes in trading app downloads coincided with the receipt of stimulus checks. 
  • A more broad-based stimulus will lead to a higher uptick of retail-investing, added BofA.
  • Sign up here for our daily newsletter, 10 Things Before the Opening Bell.

Retail investors have poured into the stock market in the last year, lured by comission-free trading, work from home conditions, stimulus checks, and high savings rates. Now, Bank of America says that it is expecting the next round of federal stimulus aid to drive another surge in retail investing.

“We expect another uptick in retail activity with another round of stimulus, though the level will likely depend on the type of stimulus (broad based or targeted), the market backdrop at the time, as well as any potential regulatory changes discussed over the coming weeks,” a team of BofA analysts said in a recent note. 

The firm found that the last two spikes in trading app downloads coincided with the receipt of stimulus checks. However, in both cases, there were extreme market moves (April 2020) and individual stock moves (January 2021) that helped draw investors.

If the next round of stimulus is broad based, BofA expects a higher level of retail activity, particularly as unemployment improves and many Americans are in better financial positions. President Joe Biden’s proposed $1.9 trillion stimulus plan includes $1,400 direct payments for individuals making up to $75,000 a year. 

Read more: Raymond James says buy these 12 ‘center of the storm’ stocks that are set to rebound as the economy reopens – including 6 that can outperform the S&P 500 in the coming months

While BofA expects retail engagement to moderate throughout 2021 following the stimulus as people spend more time and money away from home, the bank still expects structurally higher levels of retail activity versus 2019 because of zero commissions, new entrants, and advances in technology. 

In addition to a stimulus-boost, Bank of America’s data shows that the recent surge in retail trading has been led by young investors and social media.

Throughout 2020 and January 2021, brokerage firms E-Trade and TD Ameritrade saw a rising percentage of users aged 18-34, BofA said.

“It’s not just retail investors that may increasingly be a force in markets, its young retail investors,” BofA noted. “And while traditional news outlets did see a usage boost from the January surge in certain stocks, the boost was far bigger for Reddit, which tells you something about how these younger investors are obtaining views and information.” 

Bank of America found that Robinhood daily average users reached 8 million, up from an average of 4.5 million, at the height of the GameStop market-mania in late January. At the same time, conversations on the WallStreetBets Reddit forum climbed dramatically.

While Robinhood usage has come down from its January highs, it still remains elevated relative to before the GameStop frenzy, indicating that retail activity is here to stay, BofA added.

Screen Shot 2021 02 16 at 10.48.24 AM
savings rate stimulus stocks bofa chart

Read more: Biden’s ESG push is a huge opportunity for asset managers. Firms like BlackRock and Fidelity are making hires, boosting tech tools, and launching new products to capture it.

Read the original article on Business Insider