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How To Make Money In Robinhood

Robinhood is an app that helps to invest in stocks, ETFs, options, and cryptocurrencies, all commission-free. Robinhood earns money by offering: Robinhood Gold, a margin trading service, which starts at $6 a month, earn interests from customer cash and stocks, and rebates from market makers and trading venues.

Quick intro do Robinhood

As pointed out on the Robinhood website you can " Invest in stocks, ETFs, options, and cryptocurrencies, all commission-free, right from your phone or desktop."

Robinhood earns money by offering:

  • Robinhood Gold, a margin trading service, which starts at $6 a month
  • Earn interests from customer cash and stocks, just like a bank collects interest on cash deposits
  • And from rebates from market makers and trading venues

Robinhood's claimed mission is to "democratize access to the American financial system."

Indeed, Robinhood's primary value proposition is fueled by an investing platform that lets you buy and sell stocks, exchange-traded funds, options, and cryptocurrencies, all commission-free. As its mission is to democratize the financial system, this goes through three main elements of the platform:

  • User-friendly
  • Made for all investors–newcomers
  • And convenient also to experts (even though that is not the primary target)

As Vlad Tenev, co-founder of Robinhood told Business Insider "there were a lot of people who didn't believe in it, and we had to bang down a ton of doors. We were really relentless."

After seventy-five pitches they finally got a round of investing that allowed them to launch the platform.

As explained on the Robinhood website, the realization of a market potential from the app came from the two founders' experience in selling software to Wall Street's hedge funds.

They figured those funds paid nothing for those transactions, while the average American would be charged for fees that would be up to $10 for every trade. From that, they realized they could democratize the whole process.

That is why in December 2013 they launched the service on Hacker News even before it was available:

robinhood-hacker-news

This strategy paid off and Robinhood grew quickly, from a waiting list of hundreds of thousands of users in 2014 to over 3 million accounts in 2018. The convenience of the app is at the same time strength and for some a weakness. As pointed out on Bloomberg "it's a little bit like putting a casino in an investor's pocket."

However, that same frictionless, friendly user-experience, together with a seamless app have made it extremely popular among millennials.

Robinhood also makes money from rebates, as pointed out on its blog "the revenue from these rebates cover the costs of operating the business and to offer commission-free trading.

Robinhood earns ~$0.00026 in rebates per dollar traded. That means if you buy a stock for $100.00, Robinhood earns 2.6 cents from the market maker."

At the same time, Bloomberg found out that than 40 percent of its revenue in early 2018, came from selling its customers' orders to high-frequency trading firms, or market makers.

Why does this matter? For a company that called itself Robinhood, which is supposed to democratize the financial markets. It might be paradoxical that the same company makes most of its revenues from users that have small capitals that generate income for high-frequency trading firms, which are the quintessence of Wall Street.

Contents

  • Breaking down how Robinhood really makes money
    • Interests earning accounts
    • The freemium model
    • Market making fees
  • When a company becomes a synonym of buying stocks
  • Handling hypergrowth
  • Robinhood and the meme economy
  • Robinhood's IPO
  • Wall Street As Main Customer
  • Doge Represented Most Of Robinhood Growth For Crypto Assets
  • Who Are Robinhood Customers?
    • Related Resources

Breaking down how Robinhood really makes money

If we look at the Robinhood business model more in detail, we find out it makes money with three primary ways:

  • Interest earning accounts
  • A freemium model relying on more "advanced" features
  • Monetizing via market making fees

Interests earning accounts

When the cash on Robinhood accounts are uninvested cash, those can be lent out and invested in other safe financial instruments that make Robinhood earn a small return on each dollar invested.

The freemium model

Freemium is an effective model that can help companies leverage the free offering to create a sales funnel that generates a continuous stream of leads and paying customers.

Indeed, Robinhood offers basic services for free, and it offers more advanced functionalities (like buying on margins, or after-hours trading) part of a paid package called Robinhood Gold.

Read: Successful Types Of Business Models

Market making fees

Another more controversial way for Robinhood to make money is through market makers, which pay small fees to Robinhood for sending trades to process through their platforms.

When a company becomes a synonym of buying stocks

During the pandemic Robinhood became even more popular, as more people looked into investing:

robonhood-vs-buy-stock

Stories of Robinhood amateurs, retail investors, performing better than Wall Street firms, became a mantra that helped the company further spread and grow.

However, Robinhood also became an app used by teenagers. In June 2020, a 20-year old started to trade options at the margin, and he had accumulated a paper loss of over $700K which led him to suicide .

This opened up the worry of predatory issues from the Robinhood part and the risk of running an app that makes it easy for everyone to trade. How Robinhood will address these issues will also affect how the platform will evolve and how regulation will react to that.

Handling hypergrowth

As we saw at the beginning of this story, Robinhood's preferred mode of expansion has always been through a waitlist that the company opened to quickly gain traction.

Robinhood started to roll out its waitlist in 2019, for the UK. This was an important move, as it would have enabled an expansion outside the US.

As the company announced back in 2019:

In 2013, Robinhood set out on a mission to democratize the financial system. We pioneered commission-free investing in the US to enable everyone to participate in the markets. Since then, over six million Americans have discovered Robinhood.

And it continued:

Today, we're excited to continue our journey and introduce the Robinhood investing platform to the UK. With Robinhood, you can invest in thousands of US and global stocks, commission-free. There are no foreign exchange fees and no account minimums. Sign up today to get early access when we launch in early 2020.

Yet, as the pandemic hit and growth picked up even further, also troubles came with it. Indeed, one thing is growth, another is hypergrowth.

When companies scale too quickly, especially in a sector, like Robinhood's growth within the financial industry, things can get messy.

In an industry highly regulated, and with the potential to negatively influence the lives of many young people approaching trading for the first time, Robinhood had to pause its international growth plan and focus on the US market.

In a statement released to TechCrunch the company announced:

A lot has changed in the world over the past few months, and we've made the difficult decision to postpone our UK launch indefinitely.

And it stressed out how it needed to focus back on its core, the US, before being able to grow internationally, and not for lack of resources.

The company, back in May 2020, closed a round of $280 million, led by Sequoia, which valued the company at $8.3 billion.

Therefore, the focus back to the US, more than a problem of lack of allocated resources for growth, is a problem of handling scalability in an industry that has high regulatory boundaries.

Robinhood and the meme economy

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Meme stocks are securities that go viral online and attract the attention of the younger generation of retail investors. Meme investing, therefore, is a bottom-up, community-driven approach to investing that positions itself as the antonym to Wall Street investing. Also, meme investing often looks at attractive opportunities with lower liquidity that might be easier to overtake, thus enabling wide speculation, as "meme investors" often look for disproportionate short-term returns.

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Meme stocks are securities that go viral online and attract the attention of the younger generation of retail investors. Meme investing, therefore, is a bottom-up, community-driven approach to investing that positions itself as the antonym to Wall Street investing. Also, meme investing often looks at attractive opportunities with lower liquidity that might be easier to overtake, thus enabling wide speculation, as "meme investors" often look for disproportionate short-term returns.

As I explained in the piece about meme investing:

Platforms like Robinhood make money on fees from large Wall Street institutions through a mechanism known as "payment for order flow." In short, this is controversial not only from the fact it kind of goes against Robinhood's mission to democratize investing but also in terms of potential conflict of interests between the platform and its retail investors.

In factpayments for order flow or "PFOF" work apps like Robinhood, or other stock brokerage firms make money by selling trades of their customers.

For helping the market to be liquid Robinhood gets a fee on each trade, which is taken from the spread (the difference) between the bid and ask price. The more liquid the market the tighter the bid and ask price, and vice-versa. And this, of course, might be a very lucrative side of the business for Robinhood.

But it poses the question of how consistent it is with its mission.

Indeed, during the take over of meme stocks in 2021, as explained in meme investing, Robinhood stopped the trades of some of these stocks (like GameStop) claiming a liquidity/risk insurance policy. Yet some doubted that this was also due to the fact that retail traders were squeezing out of the market a few hedge funds with short positions, also owned by some institutions Robinhood was doing business with (for more details look the whole meme investing piece).

As an answer to these concerns Robinhood's CEO highlighted the possibility to give away, or reduce this revenue stream, in a piece entitled "The Sub-Penny Opportunity," Vlad Tenev explained:

The Sub-Penny Rule (SEC Rule 612) prevents exchanges from quoting in increments less than a penny. This limitation can result in an artificially wide NBBO, which is the pricing benchmark used by off-exchange market-makers.

And he further explained:

In a nutshell, exchanges cannot fairly compete with off-exchange market makers in executing our customers' orders. As a first step toward better enabling our exchanges to compete fairly, we propose amending Rule 612 to allow exchanges to quote prices up to four decimal places for all stocks.

Back in 2005, when Rule 612 was adopted, the consensus was that price increments of $0.0001 were economically insignificant. Supporters of the rule argued that sophisticated investors may use these smaller increments to step ahead of retail investors by trivial amounts. Some also argued that technology hadn't advanced enough to properly handle an enormous increase in on-exchange quoting.

However, since that time, technology has advanced by leaps and bounds, and commission-free trading has become the industry norm. It's now clear that customers value sub-penny price improvements and no longer consider them economically insignificant, especially in low-priced, high-volume stocks that may only trade with a penny spread.

Robinhood's IPO

Finally, the Robinhood prospectus is out we can finally look under the hood of the company to understand how its revenues are broken up.

As highlighted in Robinhood's financial prospectus most of its revenues in 2021 were transaction-based. As we'll see this means that Robinhood is making most of its revenues from payment per order flow.

As highlighted in Robinhood's financial prospectus most of its revenues in 2021 were transaction-based. As we'll see this means that Robinhood is making most of its revenues from payment per order flow.

During the pandemic, Robinhood managed to increase all its KPIs, primarily thanks to meme stocks, and crypto investing, which draw to the platform millions of new users.

During the pandemic, Robinhood managed to increase all its KPIs, primarily thanks to meme stocks, and crypto investing, which draw to the platform millions of new users.

Among the assets that recorded an exponential growth for Robinhood, equities, and options - driven by meme stocks like GameStop and AMC, cryptocurrency investing - primarily driven by Dogecoin; made up the incredible growth in assets traded on the platform and therefore the fees taken by Robinhood.

Among the assets that recorded an exponential growth for Robinhood, equities, and options – driven by meme stocks like GameStop and AMC, cryptocurrency investing – primarily driven by Dogecoin; made up the incredible growth in assets traded on the platform and therefore the fees taken by Robinhood.

Within the transaction-based revenues, most of them came from market makers. And among those Citadel Security represented 34% of the total market maker revenues for Robinhood. This is relevant because Citadel Securities LLC is the largest market maker in the US, which during the short squeeze from Redditors bailed out hedge fund Melvin Capital.

Within the transaction-based revenues, most of them came from market makers. And among those Citadel Security represented 34% of the total market maker revenues for Robinhood. This is relevant because Citadel Securities LLC is the largest market maker in the US, which during the short squeeze from Redditors bailed out hedge fund Melvin Capital.

Wall Street As Main Customer

As the company highlighted in its financial prospectus:

We primarily earn transaction-based revenues from routing user orders for options, equities and cryptocurrencies to market makers when the performance obligation is satisfied, which is at the point in time when a routed order is executed by the market maker. The transaction price for options is on a per contract basis, while for equities it is primarily based on the bid-ask spread of the underlying trading activity. For cryptocurrencies, the transaction price is a fixed percentage of the notional order value. For each trade type, all market makers pay the same transaction price. Payments are collected monthly in arrears from each market maker.

And it continued:

Because a majority of our revenue is transaction-based (including payment for order flow, or "PFOF"), reduced spreads in securities pricing, reduced levels of trading activity generally, changes in our business relationships with market makers and any new regulation of, or any bans on, PFOF and similar practices may result in reduced profitability, increased compliance costs and expanded potential for negative publicity.

How do these transactions are computed?

Robinhood explains:

A majority of our revenue is transaction-based, in that we receive consideration in exchange for routing our users' equity, option and cryptocurrency trade orders to market makers for execution. With respect to equities and options trading, such fees are known as PFOF. With respect to cryptocurrency trading, we receive "Transaction Rebates." In the case of equities, the fees we receive are typically based on the size of the publicly quoted bid-ask spread for the security being traded; that is, we receive a fixed percentage of the difference between the publicly quoted bid and ask at the time the trade is executed. For options, our fee is on a per contract basis based on the underlying security. In the case of cryptocurrencies, our rebate is a fixed percentage of the notional order value. Within each asset class, whether equities, options or cryptocurrencies, the transaction-based revenue we earn is calculated in an identical manner among all participating market makers. We route equity and option orders in priority to participating market makers that we believe are most likely to give our customers the best execution, based on historical performance, and we do not consider transaction fees when routing orders. For cryptocurrency orders, we route to various market makers that we believe offer competitive pricing, and we do not consider Transaction Rebates when routing cryptocurrency orders.

Doge Represented Most Of Robinhood Growth For Crypto Assets

As highlighted in its financial prospects:

A substantial portion of the recent growth in our net revenues earned from cryptocurrency transactions is attributable to transactions in Dogecoin. If demand for transactions in Dogecoin declines and is not replaced by new demand for other cryptocurrencies available for trading on our platform, our business, financial condition and results of operations could be adversely affected.

Dogecoin was so important in terms of revenue streams related to crypto investing, that in Robinhood prospectus it was highlighted how the company would be negatively affected "if the markets for Dogecoin deteriorate or if the price of Dogecoin declines, including as a result of factors such as negative perceptions of Dogecoin or the increased availability of Dogecoin on other cryptocurrency trading platforms."

Who Are Robinhood Customers?

As highlighted in the financial prospects "from January 1, 2015, to March 31, 2021, over half of the customers funding accounts on our platform told us that Robinhood was their first brokerage account."

And it continued "as of March 31, 2021, approximately 70% of our AUC came from customers on our platform aged 18 to 40, and the median age of customers on our platform was 31."

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How To Make Money In Robinhood

Source: https://fourweekmba.com/how-does-robinhood-make-money/

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