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Robinhood app goes down as markets fall

The company says service is back up and trading has been restored.

Oscar Gonzalez Former staff reporter
Oscar Gonzalez is a Texas native who covered video games, conspiracy theories, misinformation and cryptocurrency.
Expertise Video Games, Misinformation, Conspiracy Theories, Cryptocurrency, NFTs, Movies, TV, Economy, Stocks
Oscar Gonzalez
robinhood

Robinhood suffered another outage. 

Robinhood/ Screenshot by Shelby Brown/ CNET

Popular stock-trading app Robinhood went down Monday amid a stock market drop that fell so rapidly due to coronavirus fears and falling oil prices that trading was temporarily halted. A similar outage happened March 2, although for a much longer period of time. 

The company said via Twitter it has "partially restored" services after trading was stopped Monday morning. The Robinhood status page showed an issue appeared at 6:51 a.m. PT and a fix was being worked on at 7:30 a.m.

Robinhood updated its status page at 10:25 a.m. PT, saying trading of new orders, with the exception of fractional equities, is functional. The app gave the all clear around 3:30 p.m. PT, saying Robinhood is "back up and running again" and that trading has been restored. 

A Robinhood spokesperson says the interruption was not related to last week's outage.

"Our platform is now fully operational and we're working hard to improve our service during these historic and volatile market conditions," the spokesperson said in an emailed statement Monday. "We know this interruption was frustrating for our customers – especially after last week and on a day that trading was halted market-wide." 

Stocks plunged so badly Monday morning, it triggered a failsafe that halts trading for 15 minutes when there's a rapid decline of 7% of the S&P 500.  

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