Texas Supreme Court Ends Abbott's Push to Expel Lawmakers Who Fled the State...
Steve Cohen, TN's Lone Democrat, Announces He's Not Seeking Re-Election
Dexter Taylor Shows Why New York's Anti-Gunners Can't Be Taken Seriously
Trump Just Clowned 'Vegan' James Talarico Into Oblivion With These Remarks
Gavin Newsom’s Former Chief of Staff Cops to Massive Fraud, Tax Scam, and...
Tim Walz Called Steve Scalise a 'Bootlicker' and Scalise's Response Was Perfect
The Justice Department Found Yale Discriminated Against White, Asian Med School Applicants
The Massachusetts Judge Who Gave Cambridge Gunman a Light Sentence Knew He Was...
As Gavin Newsom Touts CA's Education Spending, Spot What He Doesn't Brag About
Judge Sues Illinois Supreme Court for Unconstitutional Dismissal, Violation of Free Speech...
Venezuela Opposition Leader Refuses to Take the Bait As CNN Presses Her on...
The UAE Has a Plan to Circumvent the Iran and the Strait of...
The CIA Lands in Havana: Trump Sends a Direct Message to the Cuban...
Greg Gutfeld Mocks Whoopi Goldberg After She Accuses Trump of Castrating the United...
Here's How Seriously the US Took Digital Security on President Trump's Trip to...
Tipsheet

Protesters Descend on Wall Street: 'We Want a Free Market'

Protesters Descend on Wall Street: 'We Want a Free Market'
AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Protesters descended on Wall Street on Thursday amid the ongoing populist revolt over the stock price of GameStop. A trading app known as Robinhood banned investors from trading stocks of GameStop and other companies popularized by users of the social media site Reddit. 

Advertisement

On Thursday, the group of a few dozen protesters confronted workers on Wall Street, the New York Post reported. Protesters held signs the read "Tax Wall Street Trades" and chanted "We want a free market!"

The protest comes after Reddit users popularized the stocks of GameStop, AMC, and other companies, companies that well-connected hedge fund managers had placed large bets against. The sudden interest in the stocks drove the price of the stocks up, which in turn pressured hedge fund managers to cover their unsecured positions by purchasing stocks at increasingly higher prices. The increasingly higher prices means increasingly higher losses for hedge funds, losses now measured in the billions.

The populist outrage directed at elites on Wall Street is drawing support from individuals across the political spectrum. 

On Thursday, "Progressive" squad member Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) called for an investigation into Robinhood's ban on trades.

"We now need to know more about @RobinhoodApp’s decision to block retail investors from purchasing stock while hedge funds are freely able to trade the stock as they see fit," the congresswoman said in a tweet.

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA), chair of the House Committee on Financial Services, announced plans to launch an investigation, pointing to Wall Street's history of "predatory conduct" when it comes to hedge funds and short selling. The Senate is similarly planning to hold an investigation. 

Advertisement

Related:

POPULISM PROTESTS

Tesla founder Elon Musk denounced the practice of short selling by hedge funds, and radio host Rush Limbaugh made comparisons between the populist revolt on Wall Street and President Trump's battles with the deep state. 

"You know, everything is rigged in favor of the elites, and this has come along and upset that rigging," Limbaugh told listeners on Thursday. 

The radio host said he hopes the moment will be a teachable one for those who didn't know the power of the elites goes far beyond censoring and canceling dissenting political opponents.  

The Robinhood app says it will allow limited purchases of the banned stocks during trading hours on Friday. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement