
Robinhood Markets shares jumped sharply today, trading at $92.54 and gaining more than 9% as investors responded to a pair of product developments that shifted attention away from a rough first quarter. The stock opened at $85.66, hit a session high of $93.13, and drew volume of roughly 8.8 million shares by midmorning.
The move outpaced gains posted by Coinbase, Interactive Brokers, and Charles Schwab, all of which were also up on the day. That gap suggests the rally was driven by something specific to Robinhood rather than a broad sector lift.
The company has spent the past two days redirecting market attention from a difficult first-quarter crypto pullback toward two ideas with longer runways: a government-supported child investment account and an AI-powered trading tool built for its most active users.
Trump Accounts and what Robinhood is offering families
The U.S. Treasury confirmed Thursday that the Trump Accounts app is now available nationwide on major app stores, with contributions opening July 4. Children born between 2025 and 2028 are eligible for a $1,000 starter deposit funded by the government. Family members, friends, and employers can contribute up to $5,000 per year on top of that.
Robinhood is among the platforms facilitating these accounts. Contributions are automatically directed into a low-cost index fund tracking a broad market benchmark, removing the need for individual investment decisions. The accounts carry tax advantages, meaning taxes are either deferred or reduced depending on applicable account rules. The product targets a demographic Robinhood has not traditionally served, young families and first-time investors, and positions the company alongside a federal initiative with built-in national visibility.
Robinhood’s AI trading push targets a niche but growing audience
On the technology side, Robinhood announced that customers can now open dedicated accounts for AI agents to execute stock trades on their behalf. These software-driven tools operate with minimal user input and are currently limited to equity trading. The company plans to expand their capabilities to derivatives, crypto, and prediction markets.
Goldman Sachs maintained its Buy rating and a $94 price target following the announcement, though analysts acknowledged the market for agentic brokerage products is difficult to size given how new the category is.
Robinhood’s own disclosures flag real risks. AI agents could misread instructions, act on outdated information, or execute trades that are difficult to reverse in real time. The company is framing the product toward early adopters rather than the mass market, a positioning that reflects both the opportunity and the uncertainty baked into the technology.
Robinhood’s first-quarter numbers tell a mixed story
The enthusiasm around new products comes against a backdrop of uneven financials. First-quarter revenue reached $1.07 billion, with diluted earnings per share of 38 cents. Gold subscribers rose 36% to 4.3 million, and total platform assets climbed 39% to $307 billion. The weak spot was crypto. Revenue from that segment dropped 47% to $134 million, a slide that had weighed on sentiment before this week’s announcements.
In a separate development that adds to Robinhood’s crypto profile, Raydium’s RAY token listed on Robinhood this week after the Solana-based decentralized exchange surpassed $1 trillion in cumulative trading volume. Raydium said RAY is the first token from a Solana-based decentralized exchange available on both Robinhood and Revolut, giving it reach across more than 75 million combined users on the two platforms.
What Robinhood needs to prove next
The company now faces a three-part test. It needs families to sign up for Trump Accounts before contributions open in July, AI agent trading to perform within acceptable boundaries, and new business lines to generate enough momentum before crypto revenue creates another drag.
Wall Street appears willing to give Robinhood the benefit of the doubt, at least for now.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. The author and publication are not registered investment advisors and do not provide personalized investment recommendations.




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