The future of share trading
Share trading platforms are sometimes accused of encouraging amateurs to make risky bets.
Share trading platforms are sometimes accused of encouraging amateurs to make risky bets. We meet some of the people engaging in share trading on apps like Robinhood, and hear from Bill Brewster, whose partner's cousin Alex Kearns took his own life when he thought he'd lost three quarters of a million dollars on the platform last summer. We also consider what more regulators can do with Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America. Also in the programme, a deal to sell TikTok's US business to Oracle and Walmart could be postponed or even scrapped; we get analysis from Susan Schmidt at Aviva Investors. Plus, toymaker Mattel says global sales of Barbie dolls are up around 16%, helping the company to its best year of sales since 2017. Frederique Tutt is a global toy industry expert at research and analysis group NPD, and explains why Barbie is proving so popular.
(Picture: A Robinhood logo on a smartphone screen. Picture credit: Getty Images.)
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- Wed 10 Feb 2021 22:32GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service