
The global financial landscape is undergoing a seismic shift as retail investors worldwide demand transparency, fairness, and reform in stock markets.
In Bangladesh for example, Shafiqul Alam, press secretary to the chief adviser, recently described the country’s capital market as a “den of robbers,” where small investors have been consistently deceived and manipulated, losing their hard-earned capital to large players and vested interests.
This sentiment resonates far beyond Bangladesh, echoing a growing global movement led by retail investors, particularly in the United States, where the fight for market reform has intensified since the meteoric rise of meme stocks in 2021.
Bangladesh’s Stock Market Woes: A Local Crisis with Global Parallels
At a recent Capital Market Journalists Forum (CMJF) event in Dhaka on May 25, 2025, Shafiqul Alam highlighted the systemic issues plaguing Bangladesh’s stock market.
“Large players always benefited, while small investors, often using shares as a savings tool, were repeatedly deceived and manipulated,” he stated.
Alam emphasized that past reform efforts served factional agendas rather than the public interest, leaving small investors vulnerable to fraud and market manipulation.
He announced plans to engage foreign experts to recommend global-standard reforms within three months, aiming to restore investor trust and prevent any group from holding the market hostage.
This crisis of confidence is not unique to Bangladesh.
The Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) has seen its key price index, DSEX, plummet to 4,802 points on May 7, 2025, the lowest since November 2020, reflecting a broader decline in investor trust, according to The Business Standard.
Similarly, retail investors in the U.S. have been vocal about parallel issues, including market manipulation, lack of transparency, and regulatory failures, sparking a global conversation about the need for equitable market structures.
The U.S. Meme Stock Revolution: A Catalyst for Change
The U.S. retail investor movement gained prominence in 2021 with the meteoric rise of so-called meme stocks, such as GameStop and AMC Entertainment.
Fueled by social media platforms like Reddit and accessible trading apps, retail investors banded together to challenge Wall Street’s dominance, driving unprecedented stock price surges.
This phenomenon exposed deep-rooted issues in the U.S. financial system, including the influence of high-frequency trading, short-selling practices, and opaque market mechanics like payment for order flow.
Since then, U.S. retail investors have been relentless in their pursuit of reform.
They have called for greater transparency in short-selling data, stricter enforcement against market manipulation, and an end to practices that prioritize institutional investors over retail ones.
Social media campaigns and online forums have amplified their voices, with retail investors now accounting for over 25% of U.S. equity trading volume—double the figure from a decade ago.
This surge in participation, enabled by zero-commission trading and real-time data, has transformed retail investors into a formidable force capable of moving markets.
A Global Call for Fairness
The parallels between Bangladesh and the U.S. underscore a universal demand for fair and transparent markets.
In Bangladesh, the interim government, led by Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus, has issued directives to revitalize the stock market, including offloading shares of state-owned enterprises and incentivizing large private companies to list on the DSE.
These measures aim to broaden market participation and reduce the influence of vested interests, aligning with global calls for reform.
In the U.S., retail investors have pushed for regulatory changes through petitions, public campaigns, and direct engagement with policymakers.
Their efforts have led to increased scrutiny of practices like dark pool trading and the role of market makers.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has faced mounting pressure to address these concerns, with proposals for enhanced disclosure requirements and reforms to market structure gaining traction.
The Path Forward: Restoring Trust
Both Bangladesh and the U.S. face the challenge of restoring investor confidence in markets perceived as rigged against the average person.
In Bangladesh, Shafiqul Alam emphasized the need for “deep and strong reforms” to protect ordinary shareholders, noting that “many people surrounding influential figures have become millionaires through the market. That era must end.”
Similarly, U.S. retail investors continue to advocate for a level playing field, arguing that markets should serve as engines of economic opportunity, not tools for wealth concentration.
As global markets evolve, the voices of retail investors are becoming impossible to ignore.
From Dhaka to Wall Street, the push for transparency, accountability, and fairness is reshaping the financial world.
With Bangladesh engaging foreign expertise and the U.S. witnessing growing retail influence, the stage is set for a new era of market reform—one that prioritizes the interests of small investors and ensures markets work for everyone, not just the elite.
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