Massachusetts regulators file complaint against Robinhood, alleging manipulation of customers

Source: Robinhood

Massachusetts regulators filed a complaint against Robinhood on Wednesday, accusing the popular trading app of failing to act in the best interests of its users.

The regulators’ complaint cites Robinhood’s “aggressive tactics to attract inexperienced investors, its use of gamification strategies to manipulate customers, and its failure to prevent frequent outages and disruptions on its trading platform.”

The complaint is the first enforcement of Massachusetts’ Fiduciary Rule, which Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin began enforcing in September.

“Robinhood, which earns revenue for trades executed by its customers, gave customers with no investment experience the ability to make a potentially unlimited number of trades, without properly screening them to be approved for options trading,” a statement released in conjunction with the complaint reads. According to the regulator, 68% of Massachusetts-based Robinhood customers were approved for options trading after reporting limited or no investing experience.

“Treating this like a game and luring young and inexperienced customers to make more and more trades is not only unethical, but also falls far short of the standards we require in Massachusetts,” Galvin said in a statement.

The news was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

“We have not seen the complaint, but we have and will continue to work closely and cooperatively with all of our regulators,” a Robinhood spokesman said in a statement to CNBC earlier on Wednesday morning. “Robinhood has opened up financial markets for a new generation of people who were previously excluded. We are committed to operating with integrity, transparency, and in compliance with all applicable laws and regulations.

Massachusetts’ complaint follows a reported investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission in September.

Robinhood has pioneered the commission-free trading model since its founding in 2013, and has seen its user base explode amid the pandemic. In the first four months of the year alone, the company said it saw a record three million new customers as stocks slipped into a bear market. The app has drawn much attention from Wall Street, and stock swings in popular names like Tesla have since been attributed to these new investors in the market.

Robinhood said it saw 4.3 million daily average revenue trades, or DARTs, in June, outperforming all of the publicly traded, incumbent brokers. Robinhood’s DARTs in the second quarter more than doubled compared to the prior three months, according to the company.

This year’s success has also brought growing pains. Robinhood has experienced several outages, including a multi-day outage in March, leaving some clients unable to trade during a historic day for the markets.

In August the company announced a Series G funding round of $200 million, boosting its valuation to $11.2 billion. Robinhood is widely expected to go public in 2021, and has hired Goldman Sachs to lead its IPO preparations, according to Reuters citing sources.

– CNBC’s Kate Rooney contributed reporting.

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Massachusetts regulators filed a complaint against popular trading app Robinhood on Wednesday.