How Robinhood Grew From Trading Platform to Financial Ecosystem

How Robinhood Grew From Trading Platform to Financial Ecosystem


Seven years ago this month, Robinhood celebrated a major milestone: It had signed up 6 million users. Fast-forward to 2025 and that growth seems like peanuts for the Menlo Park, California-based startup that has fundamentally upended the world of retail investing.

Robinhood had 26.7 million customers as of the end of August and offers cryptocurrency, options and futures trading, access to mortgage lenders, a robo-advisor and more. Just this year, the firm has introduced a predictions market hub and stock tokens. It has evolved far beyond a stock-trading app into a comprehensive financial ecosystem, says Caydee Blankenship, an analyst at investment research firm CFRA.

The company, which tends to cater to younger investors, is “perfectly positioned at the epicenter of the largest wealth transfer in human history,” Blankenship adds. “We’re looking at a multi-decades tailwind here. As their customers get richer, Robinhood will also get richer.”

Since Robinhood (HOOD) debuted on the Nasdaq in July 2021, its market capitalization has nearly quadrupled from $32 billion to about $119 billion. Revenues were up 45% year-over-year as of the end of July.

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Founded in 2013, Robinhood began as a social app in which investors could seek crowdsourced stock advice from one another. “Robinhood is liberating information that’s locked up with professionals and giving it to the people,” co-founder and now-CEO Vlad Tenev told TechCrunch at the time. Soon after, the firm went even further in its mission to “democratize finance for all” with a brokerage platform that offered commission-free trading.

The move changed the investing landscape forever. By early 2020, major players including Charles Schwab, Vanguard and Fidelity had followed in Robinhood’s footsteps and eliminated commissions on trades.

Then, when the COVID-19 pandemic struck and lockdowns turned stock trading into the new American pastime, Robinhood hit a growth spurt, thanks in part to its appeal to young and new investors. By May 2020, the company said it had added more than 3 million accounts so far that year, half of which were opened by first-time investors.

In 2025 alone, Robinhood has launched so many new offerings that it’s hard to imagine that just a few years ago, its users focused mainly on trading stocks and ETFs.

In April, the company began offering a private wealth management service, one that grew to include more than 100,000 funded customers and over half a billion in assets by the end of July. As its customers’ needs for wealth management have grown, so has Robinhood: In February, it acquired portfolio management platform TradePMR with the goal of building an advisory platform for the next generation of investors. This fall, it’s rolling out Robinhood Banking, offering customers traditional FDIC-insured banking and savings accounts via a partnership with Coastal Community Bank. The firm also recently expanded into mortgage-lending, teaming up with Sage Home Loans to introduce an exclusive loan offer.


finance.yahoo.com
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