Robinhood’s shares closed up just shy of 1% at $35.15, after
falling earlier in the session and losing more than 8% in its
Thursday debut. Market watchers cited a comparatively cold
reception from retail investors who have fueled rallies in
shares of so-called “meme stocks,” as well as Robinhood's
decision to reserve as much as 35% of its shares for its users.
The stock remained below its initial public offering price of
$38 a share.
That poor showing has not dissuaded Wood, who gained fame on the
strong performance of her funds in 2020. According to ARK's
daily update for its actively managed ETFs on Thursday, it
bought 1,297,615 shares of Robinhood in its ARK Innovation ETF.
At Thursday’s closing price, that would have been worth around
$45.2 million.
The Ark Innovation ETF owned 3,623,092 shares of Robinhood as of
Friday, making up 0.55% of the fund's portfolio and worth $126
million, according to data on the fund's website.
Ark did not immediately respond to request for comment
Other investors stayed on the sidelines, citing concerns about
valuation, the risk of regulation and lingering anger with the
company's imposition of trading curbs during the meme stock
trading frenzy in January.
“Calls itself Robinhood, steals from the people. Gotta love it,”
said one user on Reddit’s popular WallStreetBets, where retail
investors have gathered this year to coordinate buying that has
helped drive big rallies in Gamestop, AMC Entertainment Holdings
and other names.
Retail investors bought a net $18.85 million of Robinhood stock
on Thursday, according to Vanda Research, a relatively low
amount compared with other initial public offerings, the firm
said. Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Global Inc saw retail
investors buy $69 million on its debut, while Bitcoin exchange
Coinbase took up more than $57 million earlier this year.
Data from Fidelity Investments showed customers on its brokerage
platform placed 31,736 buy orders for Robinhood's stock and
7,451 sell orders on Thursday.
In an unusual move, Robinhood had said it would reserve between
20% and 35% of its shares for its users. The company warned in
its IPO registration that the participation of retail investors
could trigger a rollercoaster ride in its shares that could
prove too risky for those seeking long-term sustainable gains.
(Reporting by Megan Davies and Aaron Saldanha in Bengaluru;
Additional reporting by Noel Randewich and Ira Iosebashvili;
Editing by Louise Heavens, Dan Grebler and David Gregorio)
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