News roundup: GameStop, Robinhood, and the SEC made headlines last week

What happened last week? An army of retail traders, led by Reddit’s Wall Street Bets forum, poured money into shares of GameStop, a dying retail relic, as part of a battle against Wall Street short sellers. 

GameStop stock surged to record highs

A man walks in front of a GameStop store in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of New York City on Wednesday.

Nick Zieminski/Reuters


As GameStop stock surged, loses mounted for short sellers like Melvin Capital and Citron Research. Hedge funds have lost billions on the stock this year. 

Some on Reddit said the stock rally was payback for the 2008 financial collapse. GameStop, which had nearly died in 2019, ended the trading week with a market cap of about $22.67 billion, according to Yahoo Finance. 

Read more: ‘Anarchy never works’: Webull CEO Anthony Denier told us why the SEC should intervene as an army of Reddit traders takes over the market — and said membership exploded as people jumped ship from Robinhood

Robinhood temporarily paused GameStop trading

Robinhood Investing app on Twitter

The Robinhood trading app.


Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images



As retail traders pushed GameStop, AMC, and other stocks to record highs, retail investing app Robinhood temporarily restricted trades. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called Robinhood’s decision to block trading “unacceptable.” Robinhood users launched a class-action suit against the app. 

The company said in a Friday blog post that its deposit requirements increased so rapidly that it had to block purchases to “comfortably” meet SEC regulations. 

In the UK, meanwhile, the World Wide Robin Hood Society’s Twitter following grew about 100-fold in a day, as users seemed to mistake it for the Robinhood app.  

Read more: The 7 public relations execs Robinhood tasked with fixing its image following the GameStop fallout

The SEC said it was “closely monitoring” the situation

FILE PHOTO: The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission logo adorns an office door at the SEC headquarters in Washington, June 24, 2011.   REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

The Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C.

Reuters


After Senator Elizabeth Warren sent a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday, the regulator said it would keep an eye on the situation. 

In a statement, the agency said: “The Commission is closely monitoring and evaluating the extreme price volatility of certain stocks’ trading prices over the past several days. Our core market infrastructure has proven resilient under the weight of this week’s extraordinary trading volumes.”

It added: “Nevertheless, extreme stock price volatility has the potential to expose investors to rapid and severe losses and undermine market confidence.”

Read more: The SEC is monitoring the GameStop trading frenzy. Here’s why lawyers and former regulators say clamping down on the market will be tough.

ICYMI

Dogecoin icon on the phone

Dogecoin


Piotr Swat/Shutterstock.com



Dogecoin surged more than 600% in about 24 hours of trading. Here’s a look at the history of the cryptocurrency, which started as a joke. 

Here’s what happened the week before last. See you next week.