Retail investor base doubles in Europe as U.S. "meme" stock mania spreads - Euronext

Reuters

Published Jun 11, 2021 08:36AM ET

By Saikat Chatterjee

LONDON (Reuters) - The number of retail investors in Europe has doubled since the start of last year as stay-at-home rules and high savings rates during the pandemic triggered a surge in stock investing by non-professionals, according to data from Euronext.

The trend is still less prevalent in Europe than in the United States, where retail investor participation in stock markets soared last summer before hitting extreme levels in January.

So-called meme stocks like U.S. video-retailer Gamestop Corp and AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) Holdings saw record inflows fuelled by retail investors sharing investment strategies on social media.

Trading in Europe is more fragmented given the number of different stock exchanges in the region.

Still, the share of total trading carried out by retail investors jumped to nearly 7% by mid-2020 from 2% in 2019, before settling at around 5% currently, Euronext said.

By comparison, Jefferies (NYSE:JEF) analyst Daniel Fannon estimated in January that retail can represent up to 32% of total U.S. equity volume.

Meanwhile, the number of retail investors has doubled over the past 18 months on Euronext, the exchange's CEO Stephane Boujnah told Reuters.

Following its purchase of Borsa Italiana last year, Euronext controls a quarter of the equity trading flow in Europe with exchanges in Paris, Amsterdam, Lisbon and Dublin, according to analysts.

Boujnah said market abuse regulations in Europe are much stricter than in the U.S., making it difficult for retail investors to combine forces and defeat the short selling strategy of some funds, a key driver of the "U.S. meme stock phenomenon".

Retail investors have also flocked to easy-to-use share trading platforms such as etoro, which signed up 3.1 million new registered users in the first quarter of 2021, compared to 5.2 million through all of 2020.

In the U.S., the trend accelerated after large brokers like Schwab and Fidelity dropped their trading commissions, following startups like Robinhood and Social Finance Inc.