Can Robinhood Stock Surge Again in 2026?
Robinhood reported record revenues of $4.5 billion in 2025, driven by diversified revenue streams including transaction-based, net interest, and other revenue, notably from Gold subscriptions. However, Q1 2026 results missed expectations, primarily due to a significant drop in crypto trading revenue, causing the stock to fall over 27% year to date. Despite this, Robinhood continues expanding its product offerings and user base. Key risks include dependence on trading activity, particularly crypto, and potential regulatory scrutiny. The stock's current valuation and reliance on continued growth and new product adoption make it sensitive to market conditions and trading volumes.

TradingKey - Robinhood Markets, Inc. (NASDAQ: HOOD) has also demonstrated its fast-moving abilities when retail trading, crypto, and the market are aligned. In 2025, Robinhood reported record revenues of $4.5 billion, record diluted EPS of $2.05, and record net deposits of $68 billion with over 4.2 million subscribers to Robinhood Gold. As of 2026, the stock has also been under pressure according to Reuters, falling over 27% year to date as a result of a miss in earnings for the first quarter primarily due to lackluster revenue from crypto trading. With a current price per share of around $82.07 and current run-rate trailing P/E of approximately 34.2, Robinhood is priced like a growth stock in the current environment but not like pure momentum.
What Company Is Robinhood?
As a commission-free investing and trading platform for retail investors, Robinhood allows consumers to trade stocks, options and futures, and event contracts, as well as cryptocurrencies. In addition, Robinhood offers retirement investing and a suite of financial services that includes Robinhood Gold subscriptions and managed portfolios called Robinhood Strategies. Aiming to build an extensive ecosystem of financial services offering multiple revenue sources, Robinhood hopes to transition away from being just an app that facilitated young adult users to trade for free.
How Robinhood Makes Money
While the core of Robinhood's business remains built around transaction-based activity, there's now a wider variety of revenue streams within the overall revenue mix. In Q4 FY 2025, Robinhood reported growth across all of its revenue streams: Transaction-based revenue grew 15% to $776 million; Net interest revenue grew 39% to $411 million; Other revenue grew 109% to $96 million, driven by the Robinhood Gold subscription service and others. In total, the company reported total revenues of $4.5 billion, and 27.0 million funded accounts.
This diversification extends beyond Robinhood's revenue sources to how Robinhood is growing its business; Robinhood has embarked upon expanding its product offerings to include credit cards, financial advisory services, banking-related products/services, prediction markets, and professionally managed portfolios. Additionally, Reuters reported in April that Robinhood's venture capital division made a $75 million investment in OpenAI, underscoring Robinhood's intention to be more than just a brokerage application and become a full-service fintech company.
The Latest Financial Results Show Strength, but Also a Clear Weak Spot
Results for Robinhood in Q1 2026 were a mixed bag according to Reuters, and true to form Robinhood earned $346 million (38 cents EPS) in the first quarter which was below expectations as well as transaction-based revenue of approximately $623 million which also fell short of forecasts.
One of the biggest challenges for Robinhood was a big drop in its crypto revenue, which fell 47% compared to the prior year around $134 million because of lower market volumes.
Even Barron’s reported their total revenue increased to $1.07 billion, but after hours Robinhood stock fell because both their total revenue and transaction revenue did not meet expectations.
What is notable is Robinhood's inability to lose money, but rather their sensitivity to trading. When volume in equities and options remains strong, Robinhood produces very positive results. But as crypto experiences declines, the declines in crypto revenue quickly appear in transaction activities. This contradiction forms the basis of the Robinhood story as they are transitioning to being more diversified but still behaving as if they were very much a trading/discretionary stock when market conditions change.
Why the Stock Had Such a Strong 2025
In 2025, Robinhood's stock price achieved some of the highest gains in the entire stock market. According to Reuters, the stock nearly tripled during that time period mainly because retail trading activity remained a significant contributing factor, and Robinhood proved to be significantly more resilient compared to prior market cycles. Reuters further noted that in Q4 2025, Robinhood's transaction-based revenues had more than doubled from $730 million to over $1.5 billion, with their revenues coming primarily from equity trades increasing by 132%, crypto by 300%, and options by 50%. Therefore, these performance metrics gave investors confidence that they had finally elevated their business model from where it initially struggled to find footing and had successfully completed its transformation to a long-term viable growth machine.
However, this significant strength creates a much tougher comparison point for 2026 going forward. A stock that has experienced such steep gains through 2025 typically requires continued growth in revenue generation and user engagement to stay above its price trendline. If there is a slowdown in either category when the market compares the latest quarter's results against an extremely high-performance quarter in 2025 (specifically Q4 ’25), there is almost always going to be a significant retracement of investor sentiment towards Robinhood. That is exactly what occurred following the release of Robinhood's financial results for Q1 2026.
Can HOOD Still Surge in 2026?
It may be, but the route has become smaller since the end of 2025. For 2025, Robinhood showed momentum in its operations, and continues to grow both its product and user base. According to Reuters, Robinhood Gold has at least 36% more subscribers than in 2025, for 4.3 million subscribers as of Q1 2026, and Barron’s reported that Robinhood Strategies had 285,000+ accounts funded total with over $1.6 billion in assets. In addition to this, Robinhood is also entering the prediction market and creating adjacent products that could potentially expand the company’s revenue base in the future, assuming these offerings are adopted.
The most bullish case for a large movement up is that Robinhood continues to be one of the most direct ways to invest in retail trading activity through the public markets, with continued increases in retail inflows throughout 2025. If crypto volume comes back, there are healthy option trading volumes, and new products continue to scale, the market could perceive the recent dip as a consolidation and not an end to Robinhood. This is an inference but is supported by Robinhood's revenue model and the historical responses of the stock to trading cycles.
The Technical Picture Is No Longer a Clean Breakout
With respect to its overall momentum profile, the stock now looks very different than it did when the stock was on its extreme run from 2025. It has completed the first, very large up phase, and has now begun to move into a corrective phase; Reuters indicated that the stock is down over 27% to date on the back of Q1 disapointments. At the current price (approximately $82), the stock is at a valuation premium; thus, the market has not yet fully reset to the new expectations, however, there is a visible, clear breakdown of the smooth, clean trend of upward price movement that investors were chasing earlier this year and so my conclusion is that this is currently a consolidation/rebuild phase, rather than a clean breakout phase.
The Main Risks
One of the greatest threats comes from dependence on trading activity, particularly with regard to crypto-related investments. In its most recent quarter (the third quarter of 2022), Robinhood's decline in digital assets led to a significant decrease in revenue as digital usage fell significantly while other parts of its business continued to expand. In addition, there exists the potential for additional regulatory scrutiny (i.e., whether or not the SEC would require additional regulation on margin, options, and event contract products) as these products are still tied to Robinhood's business.
The second source of risk involves Robinhood's potential for growth. Its trailing P/E ratio is currently above 34, meaning that it is no longer an inexpensive stock. While this does not by itself make it an unattractive stock, it does indicate that the current values for Robinhood's stock reflect the company growing at least at a rate equal to that of its P/E ratio and developing new products. If either diminish or slow down development of new products such as event markets or managed investments, then Robinhood may well continue being subject to high volatility, even if the overall company story remains unaltered over the long run due to current trading volume levels declining from their present trends.
Is Robinhood a Buy Now?
In the U.S. fintech industry, Robinhood has one of the most impressive growth profiles and is more developed than it was in the past. The company's revenue is at an all-time high, Gold subscriptions are increasing, its customer base is larger than ever, and it has a wider range of products compared to when it was a brokerage application. However, during its most recent quarter, its stock still exhibited significant correlations with trading volumes and cryptocurrency prices, and this is despite the fact that its stock price has already priced in a lot of optimism.
Thus, while there is no guarantee that Robinhood's stock will rise significantly in 2026, there is still potential for an additional rally to occur if the market sees a resurgence in activity and its newer products continue to do well. Furthermore, for long-term investors who are comfortable with seasonal volatility, HOOD appears to remain a viable growth stock with good upside potential. For those looking for lower earnings volatility, the recent decline is a reminder that Robinhood is still fundamentally an industry that experiences cyclicality.
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