Here’s the shocking truth about Robinhood investors vs. Wall Street stock pros

Call it the revenge of the small investor. For months now, small retail investors have been ridiculed by Wall Street professionals for being hyperactive traders — addicted to risk and hopelessly irrational. But just released academic research finds that, as a group, they’ve outperformed the market.

Yes, you read that right. The research, conducted by Ivo Welch, a finance professor at UCLA’s Anderson Graduate School of Management, is entitled Retail Raw: Wisdom of the Robinhood Crowd and the Covid Crisis. The National Bureau of Economic Research recently began circulating it in academic circles.

For the study, Welch obtained data reflecting all trades over the three-year period from mid-2018 to August 2020 at Robinhood, the online retail brokerage firm. Though he did not have data on the actual composition of each individual’s portfolio at the firm, Welch was able to see the number of individual accounts that owned each individual stock. (The data was collected, with Robinhood’s tacit blessing, by the website Robintrack.com.)

Armed with this data, Welch constructed a hypothetical portfolio that weighted each stock according to the number of Robinhood accounts that owned it. That is, if stock ABC was owned in twice as many Robinhood accounts as stock XYZ, then this hypothetical portfolio invested twice as much in ABC than in XYZ. Over the three years studied, this hypothetical portfolio beat the market (as represented by benchmarks such as the S&P 500), both in raw unadjusted terms as well as after risk adjustment.

To put these small retail investors’ achievement in perspective, consider the data compiled by S&P Dow Jones Indices on the performance of actively-managed mutual funds. For the most recent three-year period (through the end of 2019), 71.9% of domestic equity funds underperformed their benchmarks.

You might wonder if the three-year performance of Welch’s hypothetical Robinhood portfolio is not as impressive as it otherwise appears — a one-time fluke. To test for that possibility, Welch told me in an interview, he constructed an algorithm that was able to do a decent job replicating the actual composition of his Robinhood portfolio between 2018 and 2020. The algorithm keys off stocks’ trading volume, since Robinhood investors tend to favor stocks with lots of trading volume.

In backtesting back to 1980, Welch found that the portfolio constructed by this algorithm held its own against the overall market, and actually came out ahead according to some performance evaluation tests.

The wisdom of crowds

It’s hard to square Welch’s results with the narrative that the small retail investors on the Robinhood site are a pure expression of irrational exuberance.

That isn’t to say that there aren’t individual examples of such exuberance. For example, Welch found that, at one point in January 2019, stock of Aurora Cannabis was held in more Robinhood portfolios than was Apple, even though Apple at the time had a market cap that was more than 100 times larger. Since the beginning of 2019, Apple’s stock has gained more than 190% while Aurora Cannabis’ stock has lost more than 90% (according to FactSet data).

Welch’s findings are an illustration that, while not every investor is rational, the collective wisdom of the crowd is often superior. Keep that in mind the next time you hear a Wall Street guru insist that small investors who frequent platforms such as Robinhood don’t know what they’re talking about. There’s a distinct possibility that, as a group, those small investors are doing better than the guru.

I note in this regard that Welch’s findings are consistent with those from another study this summer, which used a different methodology to analyze the behavior of investors at the Robinhood site. That author of that earlier study found that “Robinhood investors have been buying riskier stocks, but have also been performing slightly better than the market.”

I note that Robinhood in August stopped making updated data available that would enable the kind of research that was conducted by Welch. A spokesperson for Robinhood explained in an email that the firm did so because “the trend data could be reported by third parties in a way that could be misconstrued or misunderstood.” News stories at the time suggested that Robinhood felt that third parties were making it appear that the company was “pandering to day traders.”

Yet Welch’s research suggests that Robinhood investors, as a group, are not the irrational thrill-seeking traders that some of these narratives would have us believe. 

This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.

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