Portfolio Strategy
Robinhood Is Not The Villain It's Been Made Out To Be
Sep. 12, 2018 10:47 AM ET
|
48 comments
|
Includes:
AMTD,
ETFC,
FB,
SCHW

Treading Softly
Dividend investing, REITs, dividend growth investing, master limited partnerships
(1,226 followers)
Summary
When an order is submitted, brokerages have multiple choices of how to benefit from it.
Brokerages will try to internalize as many orders as possible.
Robinhood internalizes none of them but moves to the second step.
Robinhood the Villain, Revealed!
A
recent article here on Seeking Alpha claimed to expose shady tactics within the SEC disclosures by Robinhood versus other brokerages. The Author claims Robinhood is making millions off of "selling out" their investors - who are particularly millennials. This was painted as shady and underhanded - Robinhood isn't living up to its name since its getting kickbacks from High Frequency Traders, HFTs!
This article contains a fatal flaw, it seems to misunderstand, or misrepresent the flow in which brokerages will process orders to extract profits from them. Robinhood does not claim it will not flow the same processes that E-Trade (
ETFC), TD Ameritrade (
AMTD), or Charles Schwab (
SCHW) follow.
Let's review the SEC allowed and mandated process that your orders flow when you submit them to your brokerage to execute them.
From Submission to Completion
Source: SEC
According to the SEC, when you submit an order - market or limit, your brokerage has multiple options seen above in this somewhat dated graphic.
- The brokerage can send it directly to a stock exchange
- The brokerage can send it off to a "Market Maker." What are Market Makers? These are where those accursed High Frequency Traders fall! These companies pay a small fee to brokerages to get a first look chance to make accept your order prior to making it to the exchanges. We'll cover HFTs in detail further below.
- Electronic Communications Network is the third choice. It is designed to relay orders directly between brokerages - cutting out exchanges and is primarily used for limit orders.
- The brokerage can internalize the order. This means the brokerage matches buy and sell orders. This method we'll discuss in detail further down.