| > This is a poor analogy. So long as there is a large enough float, which is a requirement to be listed on some exchanges, there should always be stock to buy and sell. Robinhood didn't have the money / collateral to obtain any more shares. As far as Robinhood is concerned, GME was sold out for that time period. It really is actually that simple. No shares for Robinhood meaning no new shares for Robinhood customers. In 2 days time, Robinhood T+2 settlements occurred and everything cleared up. Except the meme-stock buyers already lost interest because they had the attention span of gnats. > how much I dislike your analogy. Care to explain why its a bad analogy? The only meaningful difference I can think of is the whole T+2 settlement thing (but that's very much like "The next delivery of Furbies is in 2 days", yall can buy Furbies then). Perhaps this is stretching the analogy too far now but... the fundamental situation seems to be solid. |
The other poster is saying outcomes matter more and that the perception and promises you make to users matter.
Both valid points, but Robinhood losing their ass to perception, their direct fault or being the victim of a crappy system, is just the way the cookie crumbles. There is a play here which Robinhood hasn't considered: own up to it and build a plan to be reliable to retail investors and use realistic messaging while doing so. Their CEO is apologized but they've failed to unveil how they intend to be an ally to retail investors in the future: https://news.yahoo.com/robinhood-ceo-apologizes-restricting-...