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Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary: 'Robinhood is a brand here to stay'

Alexis Christoforous
·Anchor
·3 min read
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When Robinhood restricted trading in GameStop (GME) and other heavily shorted stocks during last month’s Reddit-fueled trading frenzy, many predicted it was the beginning of the end for the pioneer of commission-free trading.

Shark Tank investor Kevin O’Leary thinks it was just the beginning.

“I know everybody's trying to vilify the Robinhood platform, but I'm not,” O’Leary told Yahoo Finance Live. “I think Robinhood is a brand here to stay and the envy of every money center bank and every wirehouse and every online broker. No one has ever gotten 16 million accounts this quickly. In a couple of years, you're going to see Robinhood as a major player competing against them in a way that no one thought was possible.”

The serial entrepreneur and chairman of O’Shares ETFs believes Robinhood is well positioned to build on its new found infamy.

“The fact is that now we've got 16 million accounts that are learning something about the market,” he said. “The real opportunity for Robinhood is to actually take some portion of these day traders and turn them into long-term investors by maybe taking 10% of their winnings and indexing it for the long run and starting to save for themselves down the road.”

Despite the lawsuits from users and the calls for congressional hearings from politicians, the GameStop trading drama proved to be a brand-building event for Robinhood. The app had more than 3 million downloads in the month of January, its highest on record, according to data from Sensor Tower.

O’Leary said apps like Robinhood remind Wall Street to never underestimate the small investor.

“I think what we learned is that the assumption that the Reddit crowd and the Robinhood crowd were idiots and didn't know what they were doing and were stupid is incorrect,” he said. “Read those blogs. These are smart people. And they actually organized together and went after these shorts and caused major pain…. now who's the new sophisticated investor?”

Robinhood’s CEO Vald Tenev is reportedly expected to testify before the House Financial Services Committee at a Feb. 18 hearing.

In this Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015, photo, Robinhood co-founders Vlad Tenev, left, and Baiju Bhatt pose at company headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif. Robinhood is a stock brokerage that does not charge any commissions for its more than 1 million customers to buy and sell shares. "During the next 10 years, we are going to create an international company that will be like nothing the financial services industry has ever seen," says Bhatt. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)
In this Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015, photo, Robinhood co-founders Vlad Tenev, left, and Baiju Bhatt pose at company headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

The committee's chairwoman, Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters of California said she would convene a hearing to "examine the recent activity around GameStop stock and other impacted stocks with a focus on short selling, online trading platforms, gamification and their systemic impact on our capital markets and retail investors."

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said they would review trading curbs imposed by online brokerages and act on any evidence of market manipulation.

O’Leary said transparency — not more regulation — is the answer.

“The best thing we can do and continue to do… is just to continue to shine transparency on positions,” he said.

“Now there's a new risk in the market. If you go short - and obviously, under certain circumstances, you have to disclose it — you're going to get hunted down by social media,” O’Leary said. “Let's call them vigilantes. I want investors to feel that it's not rigged because it isn't. And the last thing we need is another politician saying, ‘I've got the solution’.”

Alexis Christoforous is an anchor on Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @AlexisTVNews.

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