2-3 years ago it was the Wealthfronts and Betterments of the world ruling the roost. the conventional wisdom is that most traders lose money and would be better off putting it into ETFs and mutual funds and it seemed to be winning. Bloomberg wrote fret pieces about whether there'd be anybody left to trade. now it's reversing, degeneracy is on the rise, and individual traders are 20% of equity trading volumes.
That's whats nonobvious. saying "well of course" dismisses this broader trend which is the institutional validation of something that's been extremely nonobvious.
> the conventional wisdom is that most traders lose money and would be better off putting it into ETFs and mutual funds and it seemed to be winning. Bloomberg wrote fret pieces about whether there'd be anybody left to trade.
Don't worry, even if (say) 90% of invested money is in passive index funds, you only need a few active folks to keep things running:
> Robinhood partners get to front all of those trades
If you give me, your broker, an order to buy 100 shares of Apple, and I buy Apple stock before executing your order, that's front running.
If you give me, your market maker, an order to buy 100 shares of Apple and I sell them to you out of my inventory, I'm making a market, not front running. If you give me, your execution partner, an order to buy 100 shares of Apple and I sell them to you at the national best offer (NBBO) while simultaneously or immediately thereafter buying them somewhere else for a lower price, I'm giving you execution for a price, not front running.
Most trades haven’t been executed on exchanges since at least the 90s. Sophisticated investors are fine with this. They often seek out off-exchange execution for a variety of benefits.
The problem with Robinhood isn’t how it executes trades. It’s the kind of trading it encourages. It’s not in the shadows, it’s front and center in the UI.
That's whats nonobvious. saying "well of course" dismisses this broader trend which is the institutional validation of something that's been extremely nonobvious.