Robinhood Shares Jump, Like the Meme Stocks It Enabled (original) (raw)

Business|Robinhood’s shares jump as much as 65 percent, like the meme stocks it enabled.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/04/business/robinhood-stock-price.html

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Robinhood’s shares jump as much as 65 percent, like the meme stocks it enabled.

Robinhood became a publicly traded company only last week. Its stock stumbled in its first day of trading on Thursday, finishing down more than 8 percent.

Robinhood, meme thyself.

The stock trading app that helped fuel a frenzy by small investors earlier this year soared on Wednesday in trading that had all the hallmarks of the “meme-stock mania” that drove up prices of companies like AMC Entertainment and GameStop.

Robinhood’s shares rose as much as 65 percent to $77, double their price at the end of last week, and trading was briefly paused by the Nasdaq stock exchange. They ended the day up 50.4 percent. It was a second day of sharp gains after jumping 24 percent on Tuesday.

Robinhood became a publicly traded company only last week. It priced its initial public offering at $38 a share, but the stock stumbled in its first day of trading on Thursday, finishing down more than 8 percent.

Since then, however, buyers have emerged, especially among the ranks of individual investors that the company caters to. On Wednesday, the stock shot to the top of Fidelity’s list of orders from the traders at its brokerage unit, suggesting that demand from day traders is driving the surge in the shares.

Ark Invest, the money management firm run by the social media-savvy stock picker Cathie Wood, has also been buying shares of Robinhood for the exchange-traded funds that serve as her investment vehicles. Daily disclosures of her holdings — which are closely followed and sometimes mimicked by day traders — have shown her buying more than 1.5 million shares of Robinhood, giving her a stake worth over $100 million at the peak of Wednesday morning’s surge.

Here’s what else is happening in markets today:

Matt Phillips covers financial markets. Before joining The New York Times in 2018, he was editor in chief at Vice Money and a founding staffer at Quartz, a business and economics website. He also spent seven years at The Wall Street Journal, where he covered stock and bond markets. More about Matt Phillips

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