Where Will Robinhood Markets’ Stock Be in 3 Years?

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Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ: HOOD), the online brokerage that popularized commission-free trading, went public in July 2021 at $38 a share. Its stock hit an all-time high of $70.29 less than a week later, but it dropped below $7 by the following June.

Robinhood’s stock plummeted as rising interest rates curbed the market’s appetite for the higher-risk stocks, options, and cryptocurrencies that have driven most of its growth during the pandemic. However, its stock recovered over the following two years as interest rates peaked and investors poured more cash back into its platform.

Image source: Getty Images.

Robinhood’s stock trades at about $36 as of this writing, which marks a five-bagger gain from its all-time low but still falls shy of its IPO price. Let’s take a fresh look at its business and see where its stock might head over the next three years.

Robinhood’s growth accelerated during the pandemic as social media buzz, stimulus checks, and a fear of missing out (FOMO) brought a stampede of investors to its commission-free trading platform. That buying frenzy, which lasted throughout most of 2020 and 2021, drove many meme stocks to their all-time highs. Robinhood went public near the peak of that buying frenzy.

But in 2022, its growth in funded customers nearly stalled out, its number of monthly active users (MAUs) plummeted, and its assets under custody (AUC) shriveled as it attracted fewer net deposits during the market downturn. That decline can be largely attributed to rising interest rates, which chilled the market and drove investors toward more conservative investments. But in 2023 and 2024, its business stabilized with the broader market as investors focused on future interest rate cuts.

Metric

2020

2021

2022

2023

9 months of 2024

Funded customers (in millions)

12.5

22.7

23

23.4

24.3

MAUs (in millions)

11.7

17.3

11.4

10.9

11

AUC (in billions)

$63

$98

$62

$103

$152

Data source: Robinhood.

Its MAUs remain below its pandemic-era peak, but its annualized average revenue per user (ARPU) rose 31% year over year to $105 in the third quarter of 2024. That’s only slightly lower than its peak APRU of $115 back in the second quarter of 2020.

That growth was fueled by the market’s recovery and the expansion of its subscription-based Gold plan, which provides higher interest rates on uninvested cash, bonuses on taxable deposits and IRA contributions, bigger instant deposits, lower margin rates, access to Level II trading data, and other perks. Its number of Gold subscribers jumped 65% year over year to 2.2 million in the third quarter of 2024.

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