Amateur investors have been piling in money into different stocks and taking advantage of the market crash over recent weeks, but billionaire investor Leon Cooperman has rebuked these gains and believes it will "end in tears."

Leon Cooperman, who is chairman and chief executive of Omega Advisors told CNBC's "Half-Time Report" on Monday: "They are just doing stupid things, and in my opinion, this will end in tears."
The famed investor referred to online trading platform Robinhood's surge in account openings, with more than 3 million new accounts created this year.
Robinhood now has more than 13 million users, with an average user age of 31.
Cooperman noted that many new investors are replacing gambling and sports betting with trading, telling CNBC: "The gambling casinos are closed and the [Federal Reserve] is promising you free money for the next two years, so let them speculate."
He added: "Let them buy and trade. From my experience, this kind of stuff will end in tears."
Markets have largely rallied since touching lows on 23 March, with many commentators highlighting that different day-traders also known as Mom and Pop traders have contributed to this. Experts have been divided on whether to praise the surge in inexperienced investors or blame them for falsely inflating stock valuations.
A Monday note by Societe Generale said Robinhood traders displayed top-notch timing when they rushed to the market as it hit recent lows.
"For all the mocking of Robinhood investors, their timing back into the market looks impeccable, with a significant pick-up in holdings as equity markets bottomed in mid-March," wrote Andrew Lapthorne of Societe Generale.
But Peter Cecchini, former global chief market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald said the actions of Dave Portnoy, the founder of Barstool Sports, a punter turned investor, are symptomatic of the dislocation between stock prices and economic reality.
"His attention-getting, wild style is emblematic of just how emotional and extreme equity markets are now," Cecchini said in a LinkedIn post on Friday. "It's both impulsive and compulsive. His behavior really just explains everything."
On Tuesday, Portnoy uploaded a video claiming he "killed" legendary investor Warren Buffett with his recent day-trading success.
Many amateur traders have been betting against the likes of Buffett, with airline ETF JETS seeing assets surge nearly 3,000% in 3 months, boosted by millennial day traders.
Day traders are piling into Hertz, JCPenney, and other bankrupt companies despite the overwhelming odds that shareholders will be wiped out during bankruptcy proceedings.
Prior to Hertz' bankruptcy filing on May 22, roughly 43,000 Robinhood accounts owned shares of Hertz. That number nearly doubled to 73,000 in the first week of June.
Reprinted from Business Insider, all the copyrights reserved by the original author.
면책 조항: 본 게시글에 표현된 견해는 전적으로 작성자의 견해이며 Followme의 공식 입장을 대변하지 않습니다. Followme는 제공된 정보의 정확성, 완전성 또는 신뢰성에 대해 책임을 지지 않으며, 서면으로 명시적으로 언급되지 않는 한 해당 내용을 기반으로 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다.

더 오래된 의견은 없습니다. 소파를 가장 먼저 잡으십시오.