A US District Court for the Southern District of Florida has ceremoniously rejected the requests for class certification by investors who have taken legal action against the Robinhood platform.
Making her decision known in a court document on November 13, Chief Judge Cecilia Altonaga said that after a close examination of the presented documents and relevant laws on such matters, the prosecutors’ motion could not be admitted.
Judge Altonaga clarified that the refusal stems from the investors’ inability to demonstrate to the court that concerns related to relying on individualized approaches to allegations of market manipulation against the stock-trading platform wouldn’t be widespread or common.
Individualized approaches or issues often lead to hindrances down the line, making it impossible for a proper legal procedure to be executed. In most cases, such issues are often struck out from the onset to prevent any lengthy court procedure in the future.
Judge Altonaga stated that the case meets the merits of coming under a class treatment. However, it could not properly convince the court that individualized approaches would not be common.
The case began in 2021 following the infamous short squeeze event that rocked Wall Street during that time.
A community of Redditors banded together and bought up stocks of struggling companies like GameStop, AMC Entertainment, Nokia, Blackberry, and others, leading to the meme stock frenzy of the time.
These businesses were projected to underperform in their fiscal revenue, and several hedge funds shorted their stocks.
Given the significant purchases by retail investors influenced by the WallStreetBets sub-reddit community, the prices of these stocks surged hundreds of dollars.
GameStop stock, for
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