Retail trading has gone nuts, Bloomberg says
Giddiness. Froth. Euphoria. A frenzy.
Call it what you will, but the surge of individual trading activity — closely tied to the surge of interest in bitcoin and hot stocks like Tesla and Palantir — in recent weeks is impressive, at least according to one of Bloomberg’s metrics for measuring the pace of trading among individuals.
Bloomberg’s proxy of how much trading is done by off-exchange wholesalers — entities like Citadel Securities and Virtu Trading that pay retail-trading platforms like Robinhood and Charles Schwab for their flow of orders, which they then execute — shows that retail activity is busting out of its recent range and even surpassing the heights of 2021, during the explosion of activity around GameStop.
For the record, Sherwood News is an editorially independent subsidiary of Robinhood Markets, Inc.
Bloomberg’s proxy of how much trading is done by off-exchange wholesalers — entities like Citadel Securities and Virtu Trading that pay retail-trading platforms like Robinhood and Charles Schwab for their flow of orders, which they then execute — shows that retail activity is busting out of its recent range and even surpassing the heights of 2021, during the explosion of activity around GameStop.
For the record, Sherwood News is an editorially independent subsidiary of Robinhood Markets, Inc.