Robinhood CEOVlad Tenev said regulating commission-free trading apps could limit access tomarkets .- Respoding to the app's critics, Tenev said trading shouldn't be "grim and difficult to understand."
- The Robinhood chief executive published the commentary in the Wall Street Journal Monday.
Robinhood CEO and co-founder Vlad Tenev said in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal this week that overly regulating commission-free trading could harm
The popular trading app has come under scrutiny in the past for "gamifying" investing, and now regulators have said they're considering a ban on the payment-for-order-flow model at the hear of Robinhood's business. Restricting that practice, Tenev said, would "re-erect barriers" that have long kept retail investors out of the markets.
"One wonders whether the push to ban payment for order flow and overregulate modern design is about investor protection or really about control," Tenev wrote in the article. Robinhood did not immediately respond to Insider's request for further comment.
In August, Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman
The practice of payment-for-order-flow involves brokers such as Robinhood routing customers' trades through market makers who then execute the trades and often collect on the difference between the bid and ask price.
In the Journal, Tenev said the money Robinhood receives from market makers allows the app to offer commission-free, no-minimum investment trading, which has helped launch the "new generation of retail investors."
"Making it more difficult to invest would hurt those who were shut out of the financial system for decades," Tenev wrote in the article. "Many Americans face suffocating debt and financial challenges, and more regulation would make it harder to build wealth."
Robinhood went public in July and had a volatile first day of trading. The company, listed under the ticker HOOD, is now valued at about $37.4 billion.
The app came under scrutiny earlier this year when it paused trading of
According to its latest numbers, the app has 21.3 million active monthly users. Retail investors have begun trading in droves thanks in part to the COVID-19 pandemic and government stimulus checks.