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Robinhood logo A note from Robinhood Hi Rick,

We wanted to reach out to you after a transformative week in the markets to answer a question we know many of you are asking: “Why did Robinhood limit certain stocks?”

We understand that the temporary limits we placed on certain stocks this past week were frustrating for many, especially since we built Robinhood to expand access to investing. We have always sought to put our customers first and we want you to be able to invest on your own terms.

To help explain what happened and why we had to take action, we wrote a letter to our customers and captured the key understandings for you below: For Robinhood to operate, we must meet clearinghouse deposit requirements to support customer trades. Deposit requirements are determined in part by how much stock a firm’s customers hold. If a firm’s customers’ holdings are volatile, a broker (in this instance Robinhood) is obligated to meet higher deposit requirements. Last week, in part due to volatility in some popular stocks, Robinhood’s deposit requirements rose tenfold. The combination of the deposit increase and the extraordinary increase in volume on these particular symbols led us to put temporary buying restrictions in place on a small number of those stocks. We had to take steps to limit buying in those volatile stocks to ensure we could comfortably meet our deposit obligations. We didn’t want to stop people from buying stocks and we certainly weren’t trying to help hedge funds. We hope you take away this: at Robinhood, we stand with everyday investors participating in the markets. Standing by our Robinhood community means being there for our customers through any trading environment. We’ll continue to improve as we break down barriers in the financial system to open it for all.

Thank you for being a part of the Robinhood community. Sincerely, The Robinhood Team

Robinhood logo A note from Robinhood Hi Rick, We wanted to reach out to you after a transformative week in the markets to answer a question we know many of you are asking: “Why did Robinhood limit certain stocks?” We understand that the temporary limits we placed on certain stocks this past week were frustrating for many, especially since we built Robinhood to expand access to investing. We have always sought to put our customers first and we want you to be able to invest on your own terms. To help explain what happened and why we had to take action, we wrote a letter to our customers and captured the key understandings for you below: For Robinhood to operate, we must meet clearinghouse deposit requirements to support customer trades. Deposit requirements are determined in part by how much stock a firm’s customers hold. If a firm’s customers’ holdings are volatile, a broker (in this instance Robinhood) is obligated to meet higher deposit requirements. Last week, in part due to volatility in some popular stocks, Robinhood’s deposit requirements rose tenfold. The combination of the deposit increase and the extraordinary increase in volume on these particular symbols led us to put temporary buying restrictions in place on a small number of those stocks. We had to take steps to limit buying in those volatile stocks to ensure we could comfortably meet our deposit obligations. We didn’t want to stop people from buying stocks and we certainly weren’t trying to help hedge funds. We hope you take away this: at Robinhood, we stand with everyday investors participating in the markets. Standing by our Robinhood community means being there for our customers through any trading environment. We’ll continue to improve as we break down barriers in the financial system to open it for all. Thank you for being a part of the Robinhood community. Sincerely, The Robinhood Team

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

 A note from Robinhood Hi Rick,

You got rolled!

I'll see myself out! 😄

[–] 1 pt

I saw that, I figured I would leave it in for honesty.

[–] 0 pt

Is this where I say, username checks out? 😁

[–] 0 pt
[–] 0 pt

It's a floor wax and a dessert topping video and a meme!

[–] 1 pt

Use a different company.

[–] 0 pt

I havent used them in years. I never liked them. I use TDAmeritrade and eOptions.

[–] 1 pt

He was in a few interviews just as it happened and they questioned why he did it and asked if they had a funding problem.

He said absolutely not, no funding issue.

Then probably after the interview he thought, "y'know what. They just might buy that, let's run with it."

[–] 1 pt

Tap Dancing Around the Truth. Cancel Your Accounts.

[–] 0 pt

I got the same BS email. Damage control.

[–] 0 pt

Sure they didn't want to help hedge funds. Like totally believable.

[–] -1 pt

Make sure you come back and post your reply, and it had better start out with, You Lying Bastards...."

Hahaha!