Robinhood raises $1 billion and taps credit lines to make trading of GameStop available to customers

FAN Editor

Robinhood raised $1 billion overnight from investors to shore up its balance sheet as the brokerage app was set to ease restrictions in the trading of certain volatile stocks, according to CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin.

The money raised was on top of $500 million the broker accessed through credit lines to ensure it had the capital required to keep allowing its clients to trade stocks like GameStop and AMC Entertainment.

Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev told CNBC that tapping the credit lines was a proactive measure and denied it was because of a liquidity issue.

“By drawing on our credit lines which we do all the time as part of normal day to day operations we get more capital that we can deposit with the clearing houses and that will allow us to enable ideally more investing with fewer restrictions,” Tenev told Sorkin in a CNBC interview on Thursday evening.

Shares of the popular retail trading names all rose in premarket trading on Friday in anticipation of Robinhood easing some restrictions. Shares of GameStop rose 80% and shares of AMC Entertainment popped 50% in premarket trading.

Amid a wild week of speculative retail trading, Robinhood earlier Thursday limited trading in 13 equities, including GameStop and AMC Entertainment. Robinhood only allowed clients to sell positions, not open new ones, in certain securities, raised margin requirements, and even said it would close out some positions automatically if the client was at risk of not having the necessary collateral.

Robinhood told CNBC the reason it restricted trading was because the firm was unable to meet the deposit requirements that it was anticipating for the clearing houses. The company then said after the closing bell Thursday that it would allow limited buying of restricted securities on Friday.

The $1 billion raised came from previous venture capital investors in Robinhood and the credit lines are from banks including JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs.

In short selling, investors borrow shares of a company in expectation that the stock price will go down, netting a profit when the short seller must cover the shares upon expiration of the trade.

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