Smaller investors have been winning in the battle with Wall Street over GameStop, according to a financial analyst.
“This is a very unique situation, unlike anything I’ve seen before, at least of this magnitude, and it is kind of David versus Goliath. There’s a lot of people cheering for the retail investor, and you’re clearly seeing these large investors a bit back on the ropes.”
So-called retail investors began pouring money into GameStop, a struggling video game company, in January after learning that hedge funds had bet on its demise.
The purchasing, orchestrated on Reddit’s WallStreetBets forum, sent the stock to as high as $347 a share from $17, devastating at least one of the funds and earning the smaller investors large chunks of money.
The shocking rise in price caused consternation among some veteran Wall Street players, who have called for some kind of regulation and seemed to weigh in with support of the funds.
Carlson said financial pundits complaining over what happened “is somewhat ironic,” pointing to the financial crisis of 2008.
“It was the same hedge funds that were being pilloried for shorting a lot of these different companies, and it was these financial firms that ended up getting a ton of bailouts,” said Carlson, who is a contributor to The Epoch Times. “Now, we step forward to the situation we have today, and suddenly, it’s the retail investor that’s being pilloried for driving up the price of the stock, and it’s the folks doing the shorting that are not being called out as aggressively.”
Carlson says he’s concerned that the situation will lead to increased regulation, which he said shouldn’t happen.
“Effectively, that’s an external force to the market coming in and dictating what is appropriate price, what is appropriate valuation, and what is not.
“That’s something that I think is alarming. I also question a little bit the motives because the hedge funds who are very well connected politically and institutionally, etc., they’re the ones that are being hurt in this case.”
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen received over $1 million in speaking fees from Wall Street in recent years, including some $800,000 from Citadel, according to filings with the Office of Government Ethics. Citadel money was used by the hedge fund Melvin Capital, one of the primary hedge funds shorting GameStop.
The agency said it would protect retail investors and promised to investigate actions taken by hedge funds and brokerages that might “disadvantage investors or otherwise unduly inhibit their ability to trade certain securities.”