Home » Business » 'Robinhood isn't democratizing investing': 6 markets experts break down why Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger were right to trash the trading app
'Robinhood isn't democratizing investing': 6 markets experts break down why Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger were right to trash the trading app
JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett and his right-hand man Charlie Munger have slammed Robinhood.
The online brokerage hit back, saying everyday investors deserve equal access to the markets.
Markets experts say investment success is more easily achieved by practicing buy-and-hold investing.
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Robinhood this week struck back at Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger for comparing its treatment of the stock market to casino-like conduct.
Jacqueline Ortiz Ramsay, a Robinhood executive, said people are tired of the markets veterans acting like "the only oracles of investing."
Six experts told Insider why Buffett and Munger are right in their assessment:
More interest in speculation than investing
"Robinhood isn't democratizing investing. It is democratizing speculation and both Buffett and Munger recognize that. Calling most of the folks in the Reddit mob 'retail investors' is a misnomer. They are engaging in speculative activity, pure and simple. They may be learning about market mechanics – how to buy and sell securities – but that is the easy part. What they are not learning about is how to value securities. They are not learning anything about investing. And my fear is that many will lose money, conclude that the markets are a game rigged against them and simply exit financial markets." – Robert Johnson, PhD, a professor of finance at Heider College of Business, Creighton University
'Gamification' of trading
Buffett and Munger "are not the only investing experts, but they have proven to make the right investment decisions in the long run. [They] most likely refer to the 'gamification' of trading. Blinking lights, flashy animations, big buy and sell buttons, limited information about the company trades and limited analysis functionalities within the Robinhood trading app remind of a casino type of 'action.' TD Ameritrade still leads the list, but Robinhood's IPO this year could boost them to the top quickly." – Alexander Voigt, founder and CEO at trading-insights platform daytradingz.com
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