Robinhood stock is one of the year’s best performers, up an astounding 145% YTD and as much as 187% from its lowest close in April. The company continues to progress towards its goal of creating the world’s number one financial ecosystem including an all-in-one investment app with the potential to launch its own stablecoin.

Robinhood’s stock is significantly outperforming the broader indices both YTD and since April. Source: YCharts.YCharts.
Despite the ‘super app’ vision and diversification into new products and markets, Robinhood stock’s growth profile today is tied to three core levers: net interest revenue, crypto, and options trading.
Being first to market for lower friction crypto offerings for consumers is at the heart of Robinhood’s strong stock move YTD, suggesting it will play a crucial role in its long-term vision. Robinhood has many long-term catalysts, yet its high reliance on crypto could create near-term volatility as spot market volumes have stalled in Q2.
Robinhood Stock’s High Reliance on Crypto to Drive Revenue Growth
Crypto was a key factor in Robinhood reaching its first $1 billion revenue quarter in Q4, capitalizing on Bitcoin’s major push to the six-digit level. Robinhood has signaled its intent to diversify its offerings, but it remains a primary near-term revenue driver. As a result, Robinhood stock’s growth hinges on a strong crypto market stemming from its high reliance on crypto transaction revenues.
In Q4, crypto contributed more than 35% of Robinhood’s total net revenue, as a 455% surge in trading volume drove a 733% YoY surge in transaction revenue to $358 million. This made crypto Robinhood’s largest revenue stream in the quarter.
In Q1, crypto contributed more than 27% of total revenue, as transaction revenue doubled YoY to $252 million. Compare this to 2023, where each quarter, crypto contributed between 5% to 10% of total revenue with quarterly revenues below $40 million.

Robinhood’s crypto transaction revenue and trading volume declined quite sharply on a sequential basis in Q1, which could lead to more volatility for HOOD stock.
Crypto trading volume and transaction revenue are no longer as tightly correlated as they once were in 2021. Now, Robinhood is seeing much higher transaction revenue on lower volume, and much more volatile swings in revenue. These >$100 million swings in revenue in a quarter will lead to more volatility for the stock.
Due to this volatility, management intends to diversify within and outside of crypto: “we're diversifying the business outside of the crypto business, which will make us less reliant on crypto transaction volumes. But also within crypto, there's going to be diversification over time. So crypto itself will diversify and be less reliant on transaction volumes in the future.”
While this is certainly an ideal goal to have, other revenue streams are not yet mature enough or high-growth in nature to offset >$100 million swings in crypto. For example, net interest revenue growth will rely on growth in margin used, and overall interest revenue growth was just $36 million YoY in Q1. The Gold subscriber base also is not large enough to smooth out crypto-driven volatility at less than $40 million in revenue per quarter.
Looking ahead, softening crypto market volumes could set up softer stock price action for Q2, presenting a headwind to growth should it drive a >$100 million sequential decline in crypto transaction revenue.
Spot Crypto Volumes Waning in Q2
Spot market volumes slipped nearly (12%) MoM to $1.28 trillion in April, before rebounding to $1.47 trillion in May, according to data from The Block. For June, spot market volumes dropped more than (27%) MoM to $1.07 trillion, with daily exchange volumes fading since mid-May.

Global crypto spot market volumes declined (27%) MoM to $1.07 trillion in June, the lowest level since last fall, which could weigh on Robinhood stock. Source: The BlockThe Block
On a quarterly view, this data implies spot market volumes in the region of $3.82 trillion for Q2. This marks a (31%) QoQ decline from $5.54 trillion in Q1.

Quarterly spot market volumes declined more than (30%) sequentially to approximately $3.82 trillion in Q2. Source: The BlockThe Block
For Robinhood, crypto trading volume was $8.3 billion in April and $11.7 billion in May. Assuming June mirrors the spot market and declines around (30%) MoM, this would imply monthly volume of $8.2 billion. On a quarterly view, this implies Q2 volumes of ~$28.2 billion, down nearly (39%) QoQ.

Although crypto trading volumes rebounded in May, Robinhood may be on track to see a (39%) QoQ decline in trading volume in Q2. Source: RobinhoodRobinhood
Although Robinhood’s crypto transaction revenue growth has outpaced trading volume growth in each of the last five quarters, the company is not immune to declining market activity. Volumes are waning across the spot crypto market through Q2 and this dynamic is likely to weigh heavily on crypto revenue in the quarter.
How Crypto Trading Volume Trends in Q2 2025 Impact Robinhood’s Stock
This sequential decline in crypto trading volume could negatively impact Q2’s revenue. Should average take rate remain around 0.5% in Q2, in line with the previous couple of quarters, Q2’s crypto transaction revenue would be approximately $141 million based on June’s estimated volume.
Assuming mid-single digit sequential growth in net interest revenue to ~$305 million on strong deposits and margin use, 10% sequential growth in options revenue, and $160 million in equity and other revenues combined, this would project Q2 revenue out to $870 million.
Current analyst estimates are in the region of $900 million for Q2, so this would calculate out to a more than (3.3%) miss. Though there is a chance that Robinhood could outperform the spot market in June, the degree of the market’s decline implies that there is a much narrower path to revenue upside for Q2.
Acquisition of Bitstamp Boosts Robinhood’s Crypto Volume, Institutional Presence but not Revenue
Robinhood closed its acquisition of Bitstamp in early June, building upon its quest to expand both internationally and up the value chain to institutional clients. Bitstamp will help boost Robinhood’s trading volumes by unlocking Robinhood’s first institutional crypto business. Additionally, Robinhood’s new perpetual futures offering in the EU will be routed through Bitstamp’s exchanges, offering another lever for volume to grow in the future.
Robinhood paid $200 million in cash for Bitstamp, which reportedly generated $95 million in TTM revenue through April 2025 with 5,000 institutional and 50,000 retail clients. Bitstamp also recorded trading volume of ~$72 billion from July 2024 through April 2025, per The Block. This is just over 50% of Robinhood’s retail-driven $140 billion in trading volume over the same period.
Bitstamp’s volume tracked the broader market in Q2, falling more than (30%) QoQ from ~$26.8 billion in Q1 to ~$18.7 billion in Q2. June was the softest month in the quarter, declining (20%) MoM to $5.2 billion.
Based on estimated revenue and trading volumes, it’s likely that Bitstamp’s average take rate is slightly above 0.10%, versus 0.03% to 0.04% for Coinbase. At that estimated take rate, Q2’s revenue is likely in the region of $20 million, or slightly over 2% of Robinhood’s revenue and just a fraction of retail-driven transaction revenue. However, the closing date of the acquisition means Q2 impact will be minimal at best.
This mimics trends seen at Coinbase, where institutional investors drove 80% of trading volume in Q1 but less than 8% of transaction revenue due to lower fees. Down the road, even if Bitstamp can drive quarterly trading volumes above $30B+, its revenue contribution and impact to growth is likely to be overshadowed by higher-fee retail transactions.
Robinhood’s Quest to Create a Fintech & Crypto Super App
Robinhood’s ultimate goal is to create a global fintech ‘super’ app, an all-in-one investment platform offering 24/7 trading of crypto, equity tokens and more with cross-chain bridging and self-custody of assets. Robinhood’s array of crypto announcements at its June 30 event and expansion of perks offered to Gold subscribers support this super app vision:
Crypto Staking: Robinhood is launching crypto staking for eligible US customers, beginning with support for Ethereum and Solana; staking is available to EU and EEA customers.
Crypto Rewards Credit Card: Robinhood’s Gold Credit Card already offers US customers 3% cash back on purchases, but this fall Robinhood will allow cash back rewards to purchase crypto automatically. Coinbase has a similar product with Coinbase Card, a prepaid Visa debit card that offers crypto rewards instead of cash back.
Perpetual Crypto Futures Launch: Robinhood is launching perpetual crypto futures in the EU, providing customers continuous access to futures with up to 3x leverage.
Cortex for Crypto: Robinhood’s AI-powered investing assistant Cortex will be available for crypto later this year, offering insights, trends and market analysis to Gold subscribers for different tokens.
Limited-time Crypto Deposit Boost: Robinhood announced a limited time 2% crypto deposit boost for US and EU customers, in an aim to grow its crypto AUM. Robinhood noted some success with its recent 2% brokerage transfer match, with high engagement, large balances and low payback periods for these new customers.
Smart Exchange Routing: Robinhood will soon be using fee tiers for smart exchange routing, where crypto transactions are sent to the best exchange to get the best available price. With fee tiers, the more customers trade, the lower fees they will pay.
While it is far too early to see the impacts of equity tokenization, crypto staking and other new features, Robinhood has seen robust initial momentum for recent releases over the past few quarters. It’s fair to assume this will continue for new releases given brand loyalty and constantly increasing value for subscribers.
On Q1’s earnings call, Robinhood outlined strong initial momentum for Q4 and Q1 product releases, including futures contracts and prediction markets. The company is demonstrating an ability to quickly drive product adoption, which is likely to persist for its newest and upcoming releases.
For example, Robinhood said futures contract trading is accelerating, with 4.5 million contracts traded in April, more than the entirety of Q1. This was likely driven by increased market volatility and larger intraday swings in the markets. Additionally, prediction markets witnessed more than 1 billion contracts traded over the past two quarters. Management noted that the two new products were each already contributing around $20 million in ARR.
Robinhood’s Equity Tokenization Push with Arbitrum
While Robinhood has been a trailblazer when it comes to democratizing investing with zero-commission trades, it arguably made a larger splash at the end of June with its equity tokenization push. This deepens Robinhood’s presence in crypto, especially considering the company is aiming to launch its own Layer 2 blockchain to support equity tokens in the future.
At its To Catch a Token event on June 30, Robinhood unveiled that it was launching more than 200 Robinhood Stock Tokens, essentially blockchain-based derivatives tracking popular US stock and ETFs such as Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft and more. Robinhood launched the tokens on Arbitrum, though Robinhood ultimately plans to host the tokens on its own Layer 2 blockchain built on Arbitrum’s network.
The new Stock Tokens expand access to the US financial markets to EU users, offering 24/5 trading availability (soon 24/7 with Bitstamp) and liquidity. The tokens can be traded with minimal fees, just a 0.10% FX fee on the executed trade amount, and still pay dividends to holders.
US regulatory oversight remains in the works, as the SEC has not yet unveiled a framework for tokenized securities. However, the agency appears optimistic about tokenization, with Chairman Paul Atkins stating that tokenization is “imminent” and the SEC must focus on how to advance innovation in crypto. As such, the tokens are only available for EU users at the moment.
OpenAI’s Warning Highlights Challenges of Tokenizing Private Companies
Robinhood’s stock token move already stirred up some controversy — OpenAI cautioned consumers that the tokens are not real equity in the private startup, and that it did not endorse or partner with Robinhood on the launch. OpenAI’s warning highlighted the challenges of offering an ‘equity’ token in a private company and how ‘ownership’ would work, considering private equity is typically illiquid with funding rounds sometimes few and far between.
In Robinhood’s case, here’s how the tokens are structured:
“The stock tokens are legally classified as derivatives under the EU’s MiFID and MiCA frameworks and are not direct representations of equity ownership. Instead, they are backed by traditional custody arrangements, typically a U.S. broker, that facilitate token issuance and redemption through a mint-and-burn mechanism designed to mirror price exposure to the underlying asset.stock tokens are legally classified as derivatives under the EU’s MiFID and MiCA frameworks and are not direct representations of equity ownership. Instead, they are backed by traditional custody arrangements, typically a U.S. broker, that facilitate token issuance and redemption through a mint-and-burn mechanism designed to mirror price exposure to the underlying asset.
Valuation of the tokens tied to private companies remains a more complex issue, hinging on negotiated secondary market trades often limited to institutional or high net worth participants.” In the case of the OpenAI tokens, these were “enabled by Robinhood’s [$1 million] ownership stake in a special purpose vehicle.”
Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev took to X to clarify that “while it is true that [OpenAI and SpaceX tokens] aren’t technically “equity” (you can see the precise dynamics in our Terms for those interested), the tokens effectively give retail investors exposure to these private assets.”
Theoretically, it is simpler for the stock tokens to track public companies as these can be backed by equity, although tokens may not correlate with stock prices 100% of the time. While Robinhood is aiming to bring private equity to everyday investors, the complexity of tracking private equity in a day-to-day fashion like public equities is a significant challenge.
Subscribe Below for Access to the Following:
- Robinhood’s recent push and lead in a new market projected to be worth trillions over the next decade.
- A second explosive market Robinhood may enter.
- How Robinhood is increasing utility for subscribers and what it means for growth.
- The risks ahead from Robinhood’s valuation and slowing growth.
Asset Tokenization to be Worth Trillions
Robinhood’s move is significant in that it breaks traditional investing norms, offering global access to US stocks and private companies on the blockchain with wider trading hours, quicker settlement times and self-custody, fractional ownership backed by real shares. It also opens up a potentially massive market opportunity down the road with new fee-based revenue streams.
It's also a pivot that Coinbase has frequently talked about over the past few months, with CEO Brian Armstrong saying that tokenizing securities “offers a lot of promise to consumers around being able to trade 24/7, people internationally who maybe don't have easy access to this being able to trade, trading fractions of a share,” with real-time settlement.
Asset tokenization, including equities, real estate, or other real-world assets, promises a massive opportunity in the future. A report by Ripple and BCG projected the total tokenized asset market could reach as high as $18.9 trillion by 2033, though this is likely a very optimistic, blue-sky scenario. McKinsey estimates in a much less optimistic view that the tokenized market could reach ~$2 trillion by 2030. Either way, building a trillion-dollar-plus market on crypto rails from scratch within the next decade represents an immense opportunity for companies able to capture some of this growth.
Robinhood Positioned Well to Capture the Explosive Stablecoin Market
The stablecoin market has exploded over the past five years with over 30x growth in stablecoins in circulation, up from just $5 billion in 2020 to more than $150 billion today. Stablecoins settle trillions of dollars annually and are now the most-used crypto asset, surpassing Bitcoin in transaction volume on many blockchains.
Coinbase noted some strong stablecoin metrics in Q1, with average USDC held across its products surging 49% QoQ to $12.3 billion on improved USDC integration on its platform. Since launching its current rewards program two years ago, average USDC balance has grown 3x while monthly transacting users holding USDC doubled. Coinbase also reported nearly 51% YoY and 32% QoQ growth in stablecoin revenue to $297.5 million.
Robinhood’s tokenization partner Arbitrum is seeing stablecoin adoption on its mainnet at record highs, recently at $6.8 billion. This makes it the fifth-largest blockchain for stablecoins, behind Ethereum, Tron, BNB and Solana. Arbitrum also recorded a major milestone in early July, processing more than $545 billion in swaps by DEXs on its chain.
While Robinhood has not publicized stablecoin volumes on its platform, it remains well positioned to capture growth in this market. The company already uses stablecoins to help power weekend settlements, and late last year Robinhood was reportedly considering launching its own stablecoin. Such a plan could represent a huge opportunity in another explosive, trillion-dollar potential market over the next few years, and be a top catalyst for the firm alongside global trading.
Increased Real-World Utility for Robinhood Gold Members
Aside from 4% APY on savings and up to $2.5 million in FDIC insured deposits spread across its partner bank network, Robinhood is increasing real-world utility for Gold members with recent and upcoming product launches.
Robinhood recently partnered with Sage Home Loans to pilot offering its subscribers mortgage rate discounts and closing cost credits, easing the process for home ownership. With Sage, Robinhood is offering access to some of the lowest mortgage rates on the market, such as 75 bp below national averages, providing tens of thousands in savings on interest across the loan duration.
Robinhood launched its new wealth management service Strategies in March, and is working to launch its private banking service, Banking, later this year. Strategies offers actively managed diversified stock and ETF portfolios tailored for risk tolerance, tax advantages, future return simulations, and more for a 0.25% management fee capped at $250 annually. Robinhood revealed at the end of April that it already has 40,000 Strategies customers and over $100 million in assets, a quick ramp, but signaling only a $10 million annual revenue opportunity.
Banking aims to provide customers with a private banking experience typically reserved for the ultra-wealthy, per Robinhood. Customers will have access to professional tax services, estate planning, cash delivery to their doorstep, transfers to 100+ currencies, and access to luxury travel options.
Despite creating immense value for subscribers and progressing rapidly with new features launches, Gold’s contribution to Robinhood is rather minimal, even if adoption rate doubles.
Yet Robinhood Gold Contribution is Minimal
Gold’s low contribution to Robinhood’s topline is partly due to its low fee structure, with Robinhood charging just $5/month or $50/year for Gold membership. Even though adoption rates are approaching the low teens, Gold contributes barely 4% of revenue.
There’s no doubt that Robinhood’s low-fee, high-value strategy is paying off in terms of subscriber growth, with paid subscribers rising 90% YoY to 3.19 million in Q1. This represented approximately 1.5 million new adds in just one year, with 550,000 coming in the last quarter alone. The acceleration is Gold subscriber growth is quite visible over the past two years – Robinhood has 11x sequential adds, from 50K sequentially in early 2023 to 550K last quarter.
CEO Vlad Tenev also noted that subscribers had already risen to 3.3 million as of April, surpassing a >12% adoption rate. New customers to the platform in Q1 adopted Gold at a much higher rate at nearly 33%.

Robinhood’s Gold subscribers are accelerating, with 550,000 net new adds in Q1 to a total of 3.19 million subscribers.
However, Gold’s topline contribution is minimal despite its robust subscriber momentum and corresponding revenue acceleration. In Q1, Gold revenue was $38 million, up 65% YoY, lagging subscriber growth by 25 points. Annualized revenue was $152 million, up from $90 million a year ago.

Annualized Gold revenue was $152 million in Q1, rising 65% YoY.
Gold revenue has accelerated alongside subscriber growth, but the disconnect between subscriber growth and revenue growth is clear. Subscribers are 2.7x higher versus the start of 2023, yet revenue is only 2.2x higher. And despite this growth, Gold is only contributing less than 5% of revenue.
Gold’s low fee structure means that Robinhood would have to drive significantly higher adoption for it to become a much larger revenue stream. At 12.4% adoption, quarterly revenue is only $38 million, so even doubling it to 25% adoption, quarterly revenue is likely to be around $80 million. Assuming doubling subscribers takes five to six quarters based on current momentum, Gold would still be contributing less than 10% of revenue.
While SaaS can be an important growth lever, it’s simply not at the level to offset crypto-related volatility, where revenue is swinging >$100 million in a quarter. Additionally, the time it would take to build out the Gold side to such a degree to offset said volatility would be far too long to mitigate near-term softness, such as what we are seeing in Q2.
What This Means for Robinhood
Looking at the bigger picture, Robinhood has done an incredible job in transforming its business, with Gold subscriber momentum accelerating, strong topline growth, and strong margins, earnings and cash flow.

Robinhood’s TTM operating margin and EPS have improved significantly over the last two years.
TTM operating margin is approaching 40%, a substantial improvement from less than 7% a year ago and (72%) two years ago. Even when crypto was in favor in 2020, when Robinhood was still private, operating margin was just 1.4%. This strong expansion in operating margin recently has driven TTM EPS to $1.76, up nearly 12x from $0.15 a year ago and a major improvement from ($1.30) two years ago.
Yet despite the remarkable improvement in Robinhood’s fundamentals, the question that remains here is whether the extended valuation can digest softer revenue growth in the upcoming quarters. Q2’s sequential decline in spot market volume points to a possible softer Q2 versus estimates despite Robinhood’s strong product momentum, as other revenue streams likely cannot offset this degree of weakness in crypto.

Robinhood is now valued at 64x forward PE and 22.7x forward PS, a rapid expansion of multiples since the start of the year. Source: YCharts.YCharts.
Robinhood is trading at its highest valuations, at 64x forward EPS and 22.7x forward revenue. Forward PE is stretched as EPS is forecast to decline (16%) YoY to $1.30 as Q4 2024 recognized a significant $369 million tax benefit ($0.41 impact). Revenue is expected to increase 25% YoY to $3.70 billion, though the stock will lap tough comps in Q4 and Q1 next year.

Against tough comps, Robinhood is expected to see revenue growth decorate to (5%) YoY in Q4 2025 and 9.7% YoY in Q1 2026.
Revenue growth is expected to remain strong above >30% YoY until Q4, when Robinhood faces its $1 billion crypto-driven comp. As a result, estimates point to a (5%) YoY decline exiting the year. Q1 2026’s growth is also expected to be minimal as Robinhood laps another strong crypto quarter, with growth currently estimated below 10%. However, it’s important to remember that the crypto market can shift in an instant, which could have a dramatic impact on revenue if volumes pick up significantly.
Conclusion
Overall, Robinhood is building the foundation to reach its ultimate goal of creating a global fintech super-app, remaining at the forefront of the innovation curve with continual product releases and leading in the industry’s asset tokenization push.
However, in the near-term, its reliance on crypto is a double-edged sword. A surging crypto market vaulted Robinhood to its first $1 billion quarter in Q4, though weak volumes now present a real headwind to Q2’s growth coupled with an extended valuation.
While tech portfolios are broadly outperforming in 2025, one factor remains under-discussed: as markets rise, so does risk. That’s where disciplined risk management becomes critical. Thanks to our tactical approach, our firm has delivered strong performance. Over the past five years, our cumulative returns would rank us #2 among hedge funds and #5 among ETFs. Get $100 off our Advanced tier by clicking here.2025, one factor remains under-discussed: as markets rise, so does risk. That’s where disciplined risk management becomes critical. Thanks to our tactical approach, our firm has delivered strong performance. Over the past five years, our cumulative returns would rank us #2 among hedge funds and #5 among ETFs. Get $100 off our Advanced tier by clicking here.
Please note: The I/O Fund conducts research and draws conclusions for the Fund’s positions. We then share that information with our readers. This is not a guarantee of a stock’s performance. Please consult your personal financial advisor before buying any stock in the companies mentioned in this analysis.
Recommended Reading: