On Dit 89.2

Page 32

Reddit vs Wall Street

The Modern Age of Class Battles Earlier in January, the digital Colosseum saw social networking platform Reddit battle against hedge funds; a battle that has been a long time coming. For decades, the aftershock of the GFC has coloured lower and middle-class citizens’ views of Wall Street investors and their sharkish ways. Investors have long been making profit at the expense of others. Whilst they rake in millions, the lower classes struggle against job loss, debt, homelessness and countless more devastating hardships. From 2007-2009, the United States was choked by a grim fog, destroying the lives of countless people. The stock market collapsed in on itself causing a massive recession, bringing ruin to the country. Unemployment surged, causing people to lose their homes and incomes. With it, their livelihoods vanished into thin air. Those played for fools were the lower and middle class, and the bitterness still lingers. But how did they not see the rug being pulled from under their feet? During a housing boom, mortgages were approved for people with poor credit history. Loans were being given out to people despite their inability to pay them off. This made for some shoddy returns. House prices were driven up, steering investors away from the market and causing stock prices to depress, leading to devastating financial loss. When house prices did eventually fall, many were burdened with mortgages higher than their home’s worth. The Federal Reserve’s lack of regulations on the financial sector further pressured the country. When debts grew and mortgages faulted, banks considered “too big to fail” struggled to recover, requiring bail outs. All of this was the doing of Wall Street scamming everyday people, completely despoiling them of their trust and robbing them blind. Fourteen years on and the resentment is still deep, growing evermore with the high cost of living and the never-ending debt many in the United States

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must contend with. It should be of no surprise that when the opportunity arose, those wronged served Wall Street their just desserts on a shiny, silver GameStopsized platter. The hedge funds, much like those they cheated in the past, weren’t prepared for what happened with GameStop, an electronics retail company. They were betting against the gaming company, hoping to turn a profit at the business’ expense. They borrowed GameStop shares and sold them to others in the hopes they could buy them back later for less and keep the difference, a process known as shorting. But Reddit users smelt the blood in the water before the sharks could, and they decided to take action, setting forward an unprecedented chain of events. Reddit banded together an army that wreaked havoc on the share market by driving prices up, which is exactly the opposite of what Wall Street wanted. It hoped to make GameStop’s loss its gain, but the blind side happened with such speed and ferocity that those who had hoped for GameStop’s share price to plummet called for government intervention. Yet they were left dry as political representatives turned against them. It was a battle that was fought in a completely online space. Hedge funders were oblivious to the potential social media held for spurring people against them. Throughout history, social uprisings against injustice and wrongdoing have been frequent. From revolutions, to wars, to protests, this GameStop incident is but another rise to action. What sets it apart from earlier events is the realm in which it has been fought. The ABC reported that GameStop only had 65 million shares (as of January 21st) which were bought and sold 650 million times in a period of four days during the debacle. At its peak, on


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the present moment

2min
pages 60-61

specimen

4min
pages 64-68

peter the pancake peddler

4min
pages 54-55

collective please stand up?

6min
pages 50-53

Stripes. Interview

3min
pages 46-49

hate

3min
pages 44-45

biden’s big 4 challenges how algorithms make us

5min
pages 42-43

australian pub

4min
pages 40-41

a univeristy story

2min
pages 38-39

review: girls can’t surf

2min
pages 36-37

dimweather

3min
pages 34-35

sustanabili-dit

5min
pages 26-27

reddit v Wallstreet

5min
pages 32-33

products

4min
pages 30-31

obituary to balcony bar

1min
pages 28-29

CLub Spotlight

1min
pages 24-25

LEFT RIGHT CENTRE

5min
pages 22-23

state of the union

2min
page 11

international student voice

4min
pages 18-19

sex and the small city

3min
pages 20-21

rural student voice

2min
pages 16-17

econ dit

4min
pages 14-15

vox pop

2min
pages 12-13

editorial

1min
page 7

src president

2min
page 10
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