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- Robinhood has not always thrived during periods of extreme volatility, but customers continued to flock to the online trading platform this past month, even after President Donald Trump’s chaotic tariff rollout spooked markets.
Trade-policy uncertainty and economic unease have public companies in industries from airlines to fast food pulling their forward-looking guidance for investors. Online brokerage platform Robinhood offered a confident outlook during its quarterly earnings call Wednesday, however, with its outreach to active traders helping propel the company to a strong April despite President Donlad Trump’s tariffs unleashing chaos in the stock market.
Robinhood built its reputation as a buzzy Silicon Valley disruptor, offering commission-free trading that allowed teenagers and twentysomethings to invest using their smartphones. The current appetite of retail investors is being watched closely, but CEO Vlad Tenev said the company has focused on serving the types of traders who dive headfirst into choppy markets.
“Unlike where the business was back in 2022 where we were predominantly focused on novice investors, the new focus on being the best platform for active traders has made us more resilient in times like these,” he said, “because we used to just not have a lot of mechanisms for customers that were more sophisticated that wanted to trade [in] sideways or declining markets.”
Volatility has not always been Robinhood’s friend. While traders flocked to the platform during the memestock mania of January 2021, record volumes put pressure on the company’s financial plumbing. After a securities regulator hit Robinhood with a $3 billion capital call, the company briefly barred investors from buying GameStop and other popular memestocks on the platform, leading to accusations the company was colluding with short sellers who were getting squeezed.
The company’s IPO later that year proved a bust, with shares falling from an initial price of $38 as low as $7 in 2022, when S&P 500 ended the year down 18% as the Federal Reserve dramatically hiked interest rates to fight surging inflation.
But the stock now trades above the $45 mark, and the platform received a record $6.5 billion in net deposits this past month despite stocks being on a wild ride. Trump’s chaotic tariff rollout caused the S&P 500 to plunge 19% from its record high in mid-February, only for the index to rise 9% on April 9—its best day since October 2008—when the president announced a 90-day pause on his sweeping “reciprocal tariffs.” An uneasy calm has largely pervaded since as the administration claims it’s close to securing several major trade deals.
Customers used the platform consistently throughout the month, CFO Jason Warnick said, with equities trading currently at a four-year high. Options trading is also close to an all-time peak, he added, and users’ balances on margin—meaning borrowed money—doubled to $8.4 billion from last year.
“So I’d say that there’s a pretty broad-based strength of retail engagement that we’re seeing,” Warnick said, “and all signs are positive throughout the month of April.”
Robinhood also launched futures trading and expanded its prediction-markets business in Q1. The latter has drawn criticism and regulatory scrutiny for similarities to gambling, but Tenev highlighted both areas as sources of growth.
About 4.5 million contracts were traded in April alone, the CEO said, more than the entirety of the first three months of the year, allowing customers to use the platform to take short positions for the first time.
“So it’s really opening up new behaviors and new styles of trading for our active traders,” Tenev said.
Despite all the upbeat commentary, Robinhood shares dropped over 2% Thursday. While the company beat expectations on both the top and bottom line, revenue dropped to $927 million from a record $1 billion at the end of last year. Crypto revenues fell 30% from $358 million to $252 million in that same span as a blistering post-election rally in digital assets gave way to a historic rout.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
https://fortune.com/img-assets/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/GettyImages-2208521084-e1746120527192.jpg?resize=1200,600 https://fortune.com/2025/05/01/robinhood-customers-deposited-record-april-active-traders-profit-market-chaos/Greg McKenna