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by perl4ever
2450 days ago
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Quote: "SIPC protects cash that is deposited with a brokerage firm for one limited purpose….the purpose of purchasing securities,” says Harbeck. “Cash deposited for other reasons would not be protected. SIPC does not protect checking and savings accounts since the money has not been deposited for a protected purpose." It sounds to me like this would apply to you just as to Robin Hood's ill-fated product. Just saying "we're a broker and cash sweep into a money market fund is what brokers do" doesn't seem like a meaningful argument. Why are you different? |
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> SIPC protects against the loss of cash and securities – such as stocks and bonds – held by a customer at a financially-troubled SIPC-member brokerage firm.
It sounds like SIPC protects against loss of cash for the purpose of purchasing securities _and_ the loss of the securities themselves. So in this case it sounds like by sweeping customers' cash into a money market fund, SIPC protection would apply to the money market fund investment.
I think Robinhood's issue might have been that they didn't actually do any securities trading and tried to just rely on SIPC insurance for customers' cash that's just sitting around.
Regardless of if my interpretation is correct, I'd be _really_ surprised if they just somehow ignored the whole Robinhood fiasco and managed to make the exact same mistake on the regulatory side.