08 April 2021
Never mind saving for retirement. Gen Z has embraced the stock market as a place to make short-term gains.
Why it matters: Day trading is back, turbocharged by social media and the invincibility of youth. Silicon Valley is paying attention.
What they're saying: "Active investing is a natural extension of hustle culture, in which risk is embraced and failure is accepted (and even celebrated)," write Andreessen Horowitz partners Anish Acharya and Matthieu Hafemeister.
- "The psychology of American exceptionalism," they write, combined with recent technology shifts, portends that "active investing is here to stay."
How it works: The wisdom of crowds can be found on Reddit, where a new paper finds that stock-buying recommendations outperform the market.
- TikTok is full of accounts from teens like stonk.queen, who invested in stocks like Netflix and Tesla (as well as bitcoin, of course), and who claims to have turned $10,000 into $50,000 over the course of the past year.
- Barriers to entry in the stock market have never been lower. Apps can be downloaded in seconds, and many of them, including Schwab, Fidelity, Robinhood, InteractiveBrokers, Public, Stash, Cash App, M1, and SoFi, allow investors to buy fractions of a single share for amounts as low as $1.
- Creating new stock-investing apps has also never been easier, thanks to new behind-the-scenes financial infrastructure. Thank companies like Apex Clearing (soon to go public via SPAC) and Plaid, which just raised $425 million at a $13.4 billion valuation.
Flashback: Boomers grew up in a world of stockbrokers and investment advisers. When the first stock trading websites arrived in the late 1990s, many of them tried day-trading — and then lived to regret it when the dot-com bubble burst in 2000.
- Gen X led the charge away from active management and towards set-it-and-forget-it buy-and-hold strategies, but debt-encumbered Millennials found it hard to accumulate enough wealth to make such a strategy viable.
The big picture: Passive investing is facing a backlash from analysts who say that it makes markets inefficient. "We could all use a little more of that manic stock-picking energy," concludes The Atlantic's Annie Lowrey, "not less."
The bottom line: The biggest winners from a rise in active investing are likely to be passive investors.
- My thought bubble: As a true believer in passive investing, I'm all in favor of other people's active trading. It tends to improve price discovery, market efficiency, and ultimately my own passive returns.
Transcripts show George Floyd told police "I can't breathe" over 20 times
Section2Newly released transcripts of bodycam footage from the Minneapolis Police Department show that George Floyd told officers he could not breathe more than 20 times in the moments leading up to his death.
Why it matters: Floyd's killing sparked a national wave of Black Lives Matter protests and an ongoing reckoning over systemic racism in the United States. The transcripts "offer one the most thorough and dramatic accounts" before Floyd's death, The New York Times writes.
The state of play: The transcripts were released as former officer Thomas Lane seeks to have the charges that he aided in Floyd's death thrown out in court, per the Times. He is one of four officers who have been charged.
- The filings also include a 60-page transcript of an interview with Lane. He said he "felt maybe that something was going on" when asked if he believed that Floyd was having a medical emergency at the time.
What the transcripts say:
- Floyd told the officers he was claustrophobic as they tried to get him into the squad car.
- The transcripts also show Floyd saying, "Momma, I love you. Tell my kids I love them. I'm dead."
- Former officer Derek Chauvin, who had his knee on Floyd's neck for over eight minutes, told Floyd, "Then stop talking, stop yelling, it takes a heck of a lot of oxygen to talk."
Read the transcripts via DocumentCloud.