Stocks at the heart of a recent buying frenzy driven by social media slipped in thin European trade on Thursday
US-based stock trading app Robinhood says the average age of the 13 million users on its platform is 31
Scrutiny of the non-bank financial sector was already expected to be high on newly appointed Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's agenda
The move comes amid a spike in trading on Wall Street fuelled by small investors driving up shares in GameStop and other stocks
The capital raised would be separate from the $3.4 billion in financing that Robinhood announced on Monday it had secured from its investors since Jan. 29
The details of Cohen's holdings were not disclosed, so it was unclear if he was a short seller.
Short sales have actually dwindled during the past year to the lowest level since at least 2008
The stock gained 57 per cent (8.40 pm IST) on Friday after plunging a record 44 per cent in Thursday's session
Wall Street has been gripped by a coordinated assault by small traders organising over online forums
Shares soar 1,700% as millions of small investors partake in the frenzy
Dow Inc reported quarterly results on Thursday that beat analysts' estimates and forecast better-than-expected sales for the first quarter as demand and prices for its chemicals recover
Spot gold was down 0.2% at $1,840 an ounce by 1258 GMT. Prices had fallen to their lowest since Jan. 18 at $1,830.80 on Wednesday.
The Nasdaq Composite gained 0.76 points to 13,531.18, helped by a rise in shares of Microsoft Corp and Facebook Inc.
South Korea's OCI Co, a solar equipment maker, rose as much as 9 per cent on and Japan's West Holdings gained 4.5 per cent
The next milestone for Brent prices is a rise above $60, a level not seen since late January 2020.
Shares of social media and other tech companies slid on Monday, hit by fallout from the siege on the US Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump
Among the S&P's 11 major industry indexes, consumer discretionary and communications services were the biggest percentage decliners
This comes after Donald Trump last month barred U.S. investments in Chinese firms Washington says are owned or controlled by the military
The NYSE has started proceedings to delist the securities of three Chinese companies, China Telecom Corp, China Mobile and China Unicom
IPOs have been on a tear this year, as companies rode the stock market rally that followed the coronavirus-induced slump. They totaled $220 billion globally, up 25% year-to-date