Robinhood CEO admits communications shortcomings, ahead of House testimony | Tech News

Robinhood CEO admits communications shortcomings, ahead of House testimony

Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev is scheduled to appear before the US House Financial Services Committee on February 18. 

By:REUTERS
| Updated on: Aug 21 2022, 15:02 IST
Vlad Tenev is also the co-founder of investing app Robinhood
Vlad Tenev is also the co-founder of investing app Robinhood (REUTERS)
Vlad Tenev is also the co-founder of investing app Robinhood
Vlad Tenev is also the co-founder of investing app Robinhood (REUTERS)

Robinhood, the trading app popular with young investors, could have better explained why it restricted the buying of heavily shorted stocks caught up in the social media-fueled trading frenzy around GameStop Corp, said the company's chief executive officer.

"No doubt we could have communicated this a little bit better to customers," CEO Vlad Tenev said late Friday on the All-In Podcast, the hosts of which include Chamath Palihapitiya, who had strongly criticized Robinhood over the trading restrictions, and Jason Calacanis, a Robinhood investor.

Tenev's comments came ahead of his scheduled Feb. 18 U.S. House Financial Services Committee testimony about the trading turmoil and Robinhood's role in it. The CEOs of Citadel Securities, Melvin Capital and Reddit will also testify.

Robinhood did not respond to a request for comment.

Robinhood outraged many of its customers when on Jan. 28 it restricted the buying of 13 heavily shorted stocks that had been driven to record highs, including GameStop, whose shares had surged more than 1,600%.

The moves were due in part to retail investors coordinating on sites like Reddit's WallStreetBets to drive prices higher and force hedge funds like Melvin to unwind their bearish positions. Several other brokers also restricted trading in the shares.

ALSO READ: Elon Musk's banter with Robinhood CEO triggers stampede for Clubhouse app

Tenev said the restrictions were necessary due to a large increase in deposit requirements by a post-trade regulator, but that was not spelled out in automated emails sent to Robinhood customers early on Jan. 28.

"As soon as those emails went out, the conspiracy theories started coming, so my phone was blowing up with, 'how could you do this, how could you be on the side of the hedge funds,'" he said.

"We probably could have offered more detail into that with the foresight that maybe customers would think that a hedge fund forced us to do it," he later said.

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First Published Date: 14 Feb, 07:32 IST
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