Kamis, 28 Januari 2021

Reddit forum's role in Gamestop shares frenzy faces regulatory probe - Sky News

US regulators are to review extraordinary rallies in the shares of struggling gaming retailer Gamestop, part-driven by participants of an investor forum on Reddit, as concerns grow over a surge in apparent investor activism.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said it was working with fellow regulators to "assess the situation and review the activities of regulated entities, financial intermediaries, and other market participants".

The action reflects deep and widespread concern over the functioning of financial markets, with the trading activity spreading globally including to the UK.

It all started with Gamestop. It is a US gaming retailer that has been closing stores at a pace in recent years because of weak sales.

But its shares were up by 1,744% in the year to date - with a market value above $20bn - at the close of trading on Wednesday night.

The value boom of the past week has created more than $2bn in personal wealth for its three largest individual shareholders, whose holdings have not increased during the frenzy.

The staggering leap represents a victory for retail investors over hedge fund short-sellers, who are nursing heavy losses, as markets witness a boom in amateur stock trading.

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Millions of ordinary people have taken advantage of zero-commission trading platforms during the coronavirus crisis - often using social media forums to discuss opportunities.

By piling in to a stock in a co-ordinated way, they have created value for themselves against market norms.

A woman wears a mask as she walks past a GameStop store in Des Plaines, Ill., Thursday, Oct. 15, 2020. GameStop is closing more stores than it originally planned, with the struggling retailer warning of more closures next year. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
Image: The company's own announcements have been seen to have played no role in the meteoric rise in its stock

The value surge has not been restricted to Gamestop but the risks of such activity became apparent last night.

Gamestop shares, and those of other firms including BlackBerry and AMC Entertainment, fell by more than 20% in extended trading when it emerged that Reddit had temporarily closed the Wallstreetbets chat room.

Discussion within it is widely seen by market analysts as the catalyst for the activism.

It is understood to have over four million members.

The market behaviour has prompted widespread calls for scrutiny of trading fuelled by anonymous social media posts. Reddit said it had not been contacted by any authorities in relation to users' behaviour.

Some heavily-shorted UK stocks, including Cineworld, have also showed signs of retail activist-style gains. Sky News has approached the Financial Conduct Authority for a response.

Users of London-based investor platform Trading212 complained via its Twitter account on Thursday that they had been blocked from buying Gamestop shares, with an unconfirmed report suggesting their positions could only be closed.

In a sign of the rush for trading accounts among members of the public, Trading212 said: "Due to the unprecedented demand, we have temporarily stopped onboarding new clients. Once we process the existing queue, we will be open for new registrations."

Wider US market falls in recent days have been blamed on hedge funds selling positions to pay for losses shorting Gamestop.

Wednesday's session saw the main indexes on Wall St lose more than 2% and futures indicate further turbulence ahead.

Even the new US treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, said she was "monitoring the situation" while a state regulator has called for Gamestop shares to be suspended for 30 days to allow a cooling off period.

Janet Yellen, U.S. President-elect Joe Biden's nominee to be treasury secretary, speaks as Biden announces nominees and appointees to serve on his economic policy team at his transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware
Image: The share frenzy has attracted White House scrutiny as treasury secretary Janet Yellen monitors developments

Technology investor Chamath Palihapitiya told Sky's sister channel CNBC: "We are moving to a world where ordinary folk have the same access as professionals and can come to the same conclusion or maybe the opposite.

"The solution is more transparency on the institutional side, not less access for retail."

In Gamestop's case, it has been shuttering stores for years in a tough retail landscape and market analysts have likened the stock interest - driven purely by retail investors - to a pyramid scheme.

Nasdaq chief Adena Friedman said: "If we see a significant rise in the chatter on social media ... and we also match that up against unusual trading activity, we will potentially halt that stock to allow ourselves to investigate the situation."

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2021-01-28 10:10:52Z
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