US House of Representatives finds out the truth of the’Game Stop’ situation… Robin Hood apologizes for transaction restrictions

【Youth Daily】 The US House of Representatives investigated the truth about the game stop incident against Robin Hood at a hearing.

The U.S. House of Representatives Financial Services Commission held a video hearing on the 18th (local time), calling for Robin Hood’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Brad Teneb, etc. Blamed his back. Robin Hood’s stock prices surged last week in some stocks, such as GameStop, leaving institutional investors unchanged and restricting individual investors from trading the stocks.

According to the Washington Post (WP), Teneb bowed at the hearing, saying, “What happened this time is unacceptable,” and “apologizing to members and customers.”

It officially apologized for the transaction restrictions. “We are doing everything we can to make sure this doesn’t happen again,” he said.

In the meantime, individual investors grouped around the online community Reddit’s’Wall Street Betz’ have been protesting against hedge funds’ short selling of certain stocks such as gamestops, buying the stock and raising the price. When some hedge funds suffered a huge loss, suspicion was raised that Robin Hood helped hedge funds by restricting transactions.

However, Teneb denied this, saying, “We do not respond to hedge funds (requests).” He explained that the transaction restrictions were due to the need to cope with the surge in stock margins, which had to be deposited with the financial authorities due to the volatility of some stock prices.

He said that the company has taken steps to prevent recurrence, such as increasing liquidity to 3 billion dollars (about 3 trillion won) to prepare for increased margins and market pressure. However, he avoided an immediate answer to Maxine Waters’ question about whether Robin Hood suffered a liquidity crisis on the 28th of last month. At the time, he said there was no such problem.

Democrat Carolyn Maloney pointed out that Robin Hood did not notify customers in advance about the requirement to maintain reserves, nor did he specifically disclose to customers how they could restrict transactions.

“You seem to have the right to make those rules,” said Maloney.

Robin Hood was fined $65 million (approximately 71.1 billion won) for failing to provide the best stock trading as promised to investors in December last year.

“I will not say that Robin Hood has done everything perfectly and has never made a mistake,” Teneb said. “I will not make the same mistakes by improving and learning from this work.”

Democratic Party Congressman E-Manual Clever condemned the case of Alix Kerns, 20, who made an extreme choice because he misunderstood that he lost a large sum of money after investing with Robin Hood. In June of last year, Kerns traded put options (the right to sell certain assets at a certain point in time) with the Robin Hood app, and found that a negative balance of $730,000 (about 820 million won) was stamped. Not knowing that he could get it back if he exercised the put option, he had to make an irreversible choice after failing to contact Robin Hood’s customer center every time.

The bereaved family recently filed a lawsuit in the court, claiming that Robin Hood did not properly guide the investment-related information and that the customer response was insufficient.

“It was very painful,” Teneb said, regretting the survivors.

He explained that shortly after the incident, there were some improvements, including the ability to immediately exercise options in the Robin Hood app, adding real-time phone-based customer support, and clearly displaying app users’ purchasing power. On this day, the stock price of GameStop in the New York Stock Exchange was $40.69, down 11% from the previous trading day.

【Youth Daily = Reporter Kang Jeong-wook】

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