Vigilante investors could end up ‘financially burned’: deVere CEO

May 28, 2021

By George Prior

Many vigilante investors who are being pulled into the social media frenzy to buy stocks could end up “financially burned”, warns the CEO of one of the world’s largest financial advisory and fintech organizations.

The warning from Nigel Green, the chief executive and founder of deVere Group, comes after shares of AMC jumped almost 40% Thursday as investors on the popular Reddit WallStreetBets board were once again pushing the stock in a bid to hurt short-sellers who have bet against the theater operator.

It follows similar moves that started in January when activist investors on Reddit pumped other out-of-favor firms including GameStop and BlackBerry.

Mr Green says: “There’s a certain vigilante mindset amongst those traders being drawn into this social-media frenzy to pump certain stocks.

“They seem to believe they’re in a David and Goliath-style battle against Wall Street and, judging by some of the comments on the forum, it appears kind of personal.


Free Reports:

Sign Up for Our Stock Market Newsletter – Get updated on News, Charts & Rankings of Public Companies when you join our Stocks Newsletter





Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.





“They’re behaving like activists, not investors.  Frankly, those pushing these stocks don’t seem to care about it going up – instead they’re out to destroy the sellers.”

He continues: “Heightened emotions, hype and hysteria and investing are rarely good bedfellows. I can’t help but think this is likely to end in tears for many activist traders.”

These forums have tapped typically inexperienced, younger people who might not necessarily have “the financial resources to be resilient against usually highly speculative and volatile investments” says Mr Green.

“Extreme caution should be exercised before joining stock frenzies of this nature.  The valuations can be expected to be wild – in both directions – and there’s a legitimate risk that novice investors could face a financial hit.”

Previously he has warned: “I would avoid piling into stocks pumped by social media influencers.

“If you do want the thrill or novelty of chasing big gains, you really should ensure that you have a sound, diversified, long-term plan beforehand.

“There’s a major difference between investing and gambling.”

The deVere CEO concludes: “This kind of speculative day trading is becoming a global phenomenon. I don’t think this is a fad.

“However, in order to create, grow and safeguard wealth consistently to reach your long-term goals – which for most people is financial security and freedom – there’s no substitute for independent, professional, personal advice.

“Balanced advice should be at the heart of the decision-making process – and then proceed as you wish.”

About:

deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients.  It has a network of more than 70 offices across the world, over 80,000 clients and $12bn under advisement.

InvestMacro

Share
Published by
InvestMacro

Recent Posts

GBP/USD Ends the Month with Its Worst Performance in a Year

By RoboForex Analytical Department The GBP/USD pair continued to decline against the US dollar on…

6 hours ago

Oil prices fall back to pre‑war levels. Silver drops to a 7‑month low

By JustMarkets  On Wednesday, the US stock indices closed mixed as caution persisted in the…

1 day ago

Gold Falls to an Eight-Month Low: This May Not Be the Bottom

By RoboForex Analytical Department Gold stabilised near 4,000 USD per troy ounce on Thursday but…

1 day ago

How local communities are challenging Big Tech data centers’ noise, pollution and rising electricity bills

By Rachel Mural, Harvard Kennedy School  As the race to build data centers across the…

1 day ago

Quantum sensors could spot hidden damage in the thousands of US bridges rated ‘structurally deficient’

By Alex Krasnok, Florida International University  Every bridge has parts that drivers never see: steel…

2 days ago

How everyone pays the cost for patents on seeds, and private companies get rich from keeping them secret

By Julie Dawson, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Kiki Hubbard, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Paulina Jenney, University…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.