Robinhood trading without commissions - page 2

 

An ordinary broker, only operating via a mobile app and serving customers with a minimum deposit without commission - the company makes money by selling information on individuals' bets to large hedge funds.

What the crowd has done is foolish - playing the stock of a bankrupt company that owns a chain of minimart CD-ROM video game retailers

 
Dmytryi Nazarchuk:

An ordinary broker, only operating via a mobile app and serving customers with a minimum deposit without commission - the company makes money by selling information on individuals' bets to large hedge funds.

What the crowd has done is foolish - play the stock of a bankrupt company that owns a chain of minimart shops selling video games on CDs

Yeah no, not a regular broker, but one honed to resell essentially confidential information to market makers. It's purely a scam.
Under the guise of cheese in a mousetrap(like no commission) through their app without a glass, they were peddling all sorts of crap that market makers, funds, big package holders, etc need to get rid of.
The point was quite different. To punish those involved in this dirty investment business.
The movie "The Wolf of Walt Street" came to mind, where they sold (peddled) dead shares out of a pink sheet, making fortunes on it.
It's the same thing here, same thing. They drive the crowd into the paper on various pretexts, spinning an information bubble, knowing that the company is on the pink list (almost bankrupt).
Then the company goes bankrupt. Or bankrupt on purpose, which in this case is more likely. The organisers of the bubble, cashing in on the sale of dead paper.
This is most likely what the people realised, that they had been ripped off. And they organised themselves against the filthy bigwigs in time. They took the paper to the skies. They triggered a dump and dump by punishing the sellers.
This was a different idea. To punish the dirty crooks, and to make money off the pamp. After all, the paper was dead, and they must have been promised growth stories. But there won't be any growth, so they did it themselves.
And they succeeded.

 
Roman:

No, it's not a regular broker, it's a broker that is designed to resell essentially confidential information to market makers. This is purely a scam.
Under the guise of cheese in a mousetrap (like no commission) through their app without a tumbler, they sold all sorts of crap that market makers, funds, big package holders, etc. needed to get rid of.
The point was quite different. To punish those involved in this dirty investment business.
The movie "The Wolf of Walt Street" came to mind, where they sold (peddled) dead shares out of a pink sheet, making fortunes on it.
It's the same thing here, same thing. They drive the crowd into the paper on various pretexts, spinning an information bubble, knowing that the company is on the pink list (almost bankrupt).
Then the company goes bankrupt. Or bankrupt on purpose, which in this case is more likely. The organisers of the bubble, cashing in on the sale of dead paper.
This is most likely what the people realised, that they had been ripped off. And they organised themselves against the filthy bigwigs in time. They took the paper to the skies. They triggered a dump and dump by punishing the sellers.
This was a different idea. To punish the dirty crooks, and to make money off the pamp. After all, the paper was dead, and they must have been promised growth stories. But there won't be any growth, so they did it themselves.
And it worked for them.

Well, in short, you have not seen this application and you do not know how it works. And all your conclusions you've drawn out of thin air. Oh, and you brought in a left-handed movie, too.

Selling DE-personalized information is perfectly legal - it's stated in the rules of the app, all users agree to them and it's not against the law. It's the same way Google and Facebook work.

Robingood sells all the shares of the American Stock Exchange. Nobody "sells" anything to anybody - the decisions are made independently.

The company was already on the verge of bankruptcy - hedge funds were shorting it.

 
Yuriy Zaytsev:

do you have any experience with them?

Had a bit of fun, got in through the kitchen as well. I wouldn't say there are three faces. Normal recruitment and training, strict discipline, not particularly visible. In general, my opinion it's projects of individuals usually. The times when you could get together, bump up a site, recruit people and steal from them are gone. A hustle costs money.

 
Roman:

No, it's not a regular broker, it's a broker that is designed to resell essentially confidential information to market makers. This is purely a scam.
Under the guise of cheese in a mousetrap (like no commission) through their app without a tumbler, they sold all sorts of crap that market makers, funds, big package holders, etc. needed to get rid of.
The point was quite different. To punish those involved in this dirty investment business.
The movie "The Wolf of Walt Street" came to mind, where they sold (peddled) dead shares out of a pink sheet, making fortunes on it.
It's the same thing, same thing. They drive the crowd into the paper on various pretexts, spinning an information bubble, knowing that the company is on the pink list (almost bankrupt).
Then the company goes bankrupt. Or bankrupt on purpose, which in this case is more likely. The organisers of the bubble, cashing in on the sale of dead paper.
This is most likely what the people realised, that they had been ripped off. And they organised themselves against the filthy bigwigs in time. They took the paper to the skies. They triggered a dump and dump by punishing the sellers.
This was a different idea. To punish the dirty crooks, and to make money off the pamp. After all, the paper was dead, and they must have been promised growth stories. But there won't be any growth, so they did it themselves.
And it worked for them.

They are good at it, it should be noted))). They have taken a niche between the laws).

 
Dmytryi Nazarchuk:

Well, in short, you haven't seen the app and you don't know how it works. And all your conclusions you've drawn out of thin air. Oh, and you've also brought in a left-handed film.

It is perfectly legal to sell DE-personalized information - it is stated in the rules of the app, all users agree to them and it is not against the law. It's the same way Google and Facebook work.

Robingood sells all the shares of the American Stock Exchange. Nobody "sells" anything to anybody - the decisions are made independently.

The company was already on the verge of bankruptcy - hedge funds were shorting it.

And think about why the big players are shorting the paper? And to whom would they short it?
And how do they find these buyers? Look at the movie. It's old, but it explains a lot about their shorting system.
And if the law allows it. It'll always be used.
You think anything's changed?

 
Roman:

And think about why the big players are shorting the paper? And who are they going to short to?
And how do they find those buyers? Watch this movie. It's old, but it explains a lot about their shorting system.
And if the law allows it. It'll always be used.
You think anything's changed?

The players were shorting because this company was effectively bankrupt. That company owned a chain of CD shops selling games - no one buys games like that anymore.

Don't bring the film into this - they are two completely different schemes

 
Dmytryi Nazarchuk:

The players were shorting because this company was effectively bankrupt. This company owned a chain of shops selling games on CDs - no one buys games like that anymore.

Don't bring the film into this - they are two completely different schemes

Shorts shorts, kills kills, and gets pamp ))
Don't you think it's strange? Who was buying pink paper back then?
Everyone would have dumped it and that's it. But no need for meat, who to sell to.
But the meat got wind of it and got pamped ))

 
Roman:

Shorted shorts, killed kills, and got pamp ))
Don't you think that's odd? Who was buying pink paper back then?
Everybody would have dumped it and that's it. But no need for meat, who to sell to.
But the meat got wind of it and dumped it ))

I get it - you fundamentally do not read what you comment.

There was no pampa - the kids decided to punish the hedge funds and in the end the hedge funds survived and the kids lost their money

 
Dmytryi Nazarchuk:

I get it - you fundamentally don't read what you comment on.

The kids decided to punish the hedge funds and in the end the hedge funds survived and the kids lost their money.

Russia doesn't get regurgitated, only from US territory by the way.