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Abstract:In the 2023–2024 school year, Robinhood Markets, Inc. and Duke University's Department of Economics will work together to offer a financial education program for students and student-athletes.
This four-year relationship is part of Robinhood's Money Drills project, which provides a financial education curriculum to college students and student-athletes around the country. Through Robinhood, will pay for extra portions of the personal finance class at Duke's Department of Economics via the Money Drills program, as well as bring in guest speakers to discuss financial education. Duke also wants its students to have a basic understanding of money when they graduate.
The University of Memphis and Kansas State University have also agreed to join Robinhood's Money Drills Initiative.
“Students will learn the basics of personal financial management through hands-on activities in this session,” said Professor Emma Rasiel, Teaching Director of the Duke Financial Economics Center. With the economy being so unstable right now, it has never been more important for our students to learn these skills. I'm happy to be able to provide these critical skills and ideas to Duke students in a course that is open to students who are still on campus throughout the summer.
The course will be offered every summer and will be open to all Duke students, not just student-athletes. If a student-athlete signs up for the class, anyone can go, no matter what sport they play or gender they are.
Professional athletes fresh out of high school and college are becoming instant billionaires. According to reports, a lot of professional sportsmen declare bankruptcy in only a few years. Approximately 16% of retired NFL players declare bankruptcy within 12 years. Furthermore, 60% of NBA players become bankrupt within five years of leaving the league. Female athletes' finances may be jeopardized much more than male athletes. Robinhood thinks it is important for all students and student-athletes to know the basics of money management.
About Robinhood
When Vlad Tenev and Baiju Bhaat were roommates at Stanford in 2014, they founded Robinhood.
Investing is simple for novices since there are no fees or minimums, and fractional shares allow users to trade a larger choice of assets. A simple menu facilitates stock, ETF, and cryptocurrency trading. Options trading is feasible, but serious investors may be turned off by restrictions on the sorts of orders they may make and concerns about how transactions will be executed.
Robinhood is also being noticed elsewhere. Cash management enhancements, such as a funds card and a greater interest rate on unspent cash, are being developed to complete the platform and attract new consumers. Because of platform issues, limitations on meme stocks like GameStop in January 2021, and misrepresenting order routing money sources, Robinhood's integrity and goals remain unknown.
DTCC, on the other hand, has issued a subpoena to Robinhood because their trading has been influenced. Continue reading at: https://www.wikifx.com/en/newsdetail/202210106404183745.html
More about Robinhood may be found at https://www.wikifx.com/en/dealer/4921572448.html.
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