KEY POINTS
  • Dozens of brokerage log-ins are for sale on the dark web with portfolios ranging in the low thousands to a half million dollars, according to security analysts and listings seen by CNBC.
  • Robinhood accounts tend to list at higher prices, which analysts say might suggest hackers view these accounts as easier to break into.
  • “Money, the promise of money, the announcement of money to be had and the bragging about money obtained are all simply chum in the water for bad actors,” says Richard Bird of Ping Identity.

As a new generation of investors flock to the stock market, criminals are looking for ways to exploit them. 

Hackers have turned to the dark web, where log-ins for accounts at major brokerage firms are listed for sale, according to security analysts and listings seen by CNBC.