Chattanooga Times Free Press

After rocket ride of growth, Robinhood heads to the market

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After a rocket rise where it introduced millions of people to investing and reshaped the brokerage industry, all while racking up a long list of controvers­ies in less than eight years, Robinhood is about to take the leap itself into the stock market.

Robinhood Markets and three of its executives are selling up to 60.5 million shares of its stock in an initial public offering, with trading expected to begin on the Nasdaq Thursday.

It’s a huge moment for the fast-growing company, which is sticking to its mantra of trying to “democratiz­e finance” by reserving many of the shares for its own customers, rather than just big profession­al investors. Can Robinhood convince them to embrace its stock, just as it helped a generation of investors take on trading stocks, options and cryptocurr­encies?

Here are a few things to keep in mind ahead of what’s one of the most anticipate­d IPOs on Wall Street this year:

HOW DOES A FREE SERVICE MAKE MONEY?

Robinhood’s revenue soared 245% last year to $959 million. It then hit $522 million in the first three months of 2021 alone, more than quadruplin­g from the year-ago level.

Robinhood doesn’t charge trading commission­s or require customers to carry big balances — one reason why it’s so popular. It makes the bulk of its money — 81% of revenue in the first quarter— by funneling investors’ orders to big trading firms, such as Citadel Securities, which take the other side of the trade. They also give a payment to Robinhood.

The practice, called “payment for order flow,” has drawn criticism from lawmakers and regulators. The head of the Securities and Exchange Commission has questioned whether it prevents investors from getting the best price possible for their trades and whether it impels brokerages to encourage customers to trade more frequently than they should.

But legal experts say tighter regulation may be difficult to bring about. Brokerages need to make money somehow, and if Robinhood can’t get it from payment for order flow, it could go back to charging trading commission­s, said Joshua Mitts, a law professor at Columbia University. That could make politician­s even less popular than they already are.

“I think investors in many ways are pricing that in,” Mitts said, “and there’s a pretty good sense that Robinhood is going to be OK.”

WHAT IF THE TRADING BOOM FIZZLES?

Even if payment for order flow sticks around, Robinhood’s dependence on the practice could be an issue. During normal times, Robinhood may get about 75% of its money from transactio­n-based revenue, roughly triple what some competitor­s get, said Tom Mason, senior research analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce.

Robinhood earns an average of 2.5 cents for every $100 traded. That it means it stands to lose if users start trading a lot fewer $100 blocks on its app.

Robinhood says its revenue could fall in the July-September quarter when compared to the April-June period, when revenue rose an estimated 124% to 135%. Besides seasonalit­y issues, Robinhood said it expects to see decreased levels of trading activity, particular­ly in cryptocurr­encies, which accounted for 17% of revenue in the first three months of the year. Prices of Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies have been generally falling since peaking in April.

Among other risks, Robinhood’s customers could spend less time on the app if a fading pandemic means they can go on with their lives and do other things with money.

Robinhood also hasn’t always kept customers happy: Its platform has had some high-profile outages, and early this year it temporaril­y barred investors from making trades in GameStop, when manic movements in its stock were the talk of the market.

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