Robinhood (HOOD) Stock Plummets 14% as Crypto Revenue Crashes 47%

Table of Contents Robinhood experienced a turbulent Wednesday session. The trading platform’s Q1 2026 financial results disappointed on multiple fronts, prompting swift market reaction. HOOD shares began trading Wednesday approximately 12% lower and accelerated their decline to nearly 14% throughout the day, settling around $72 compared to Tuesday’s close of $82.07. Robinhood Markets, Inc., HOOD The fundamental issue centered on cryptocurrency performance. Cryptocurrency transaction revenue plummeted 47% compared to the same period last year, pulling total revenue down to $1.07 billion — falling $70 million below Wall Street’s $1.14 billion projection. Adjusted earnings per share of $0.38 came in 10% under analyst estimates. Despite achieving 15% year-over-year revenue growth overall, the substantial cryptocurrency revenue contraction dominated investor sentiment. While executives had previously warned about weakening retail crypto activity, the magnitude of the deterioration exceeded market expectations. The selling pressure extended well beyond Robinhood. Coinbase (COIN) shares declined approximately 8% to $179, while Webull (BULL) retreated about 8% to $6.77 — even though neither platform released earnings reports Wednesday. Coinbase appears to have suffered spillover effects from Robinhood’s cryptocurrency revenue figures. A critical question emerges: is retail cryptocurrency appetite declining universally, or are traders migrating toward Coinbase? Notably, Coinbase delivered record institutional derivatives revenue in its most recent quarter, suggesting pockets of strength remain within the broader ecosystem. Bitcoin mining operations Riot Platforms (RIOT) and MARA (MARA) both retreated 6-7%. Strategy (MSTR), the publicly-traded company with the largest corporate bitcoin holdings, fell approximately 4%. Bitcoin itself traded below $76,000, down roughly 0.5% over the previous 24 hours — a relatively modest movement compared to equity market declines. Cryptocurrency-focused equities weren’t the only assets facing headwinds. Oil prices surged 6% Wednesday following reports that President Trump rejected an Iranian proposal concerning the Strait of Hormuz while postponing nuclear negotiations. West Texas Intermediate crude exceeded $100 per barrel, introducing additional macroeconomic challenges to an already volatile trading session. The Nasdaq Composite index concluded Wednesday down approximately 0.35%, containing broader market damage even as cryptocurrency-related securities absorbed steeper losses. Regarding expenses, Robinhood increased its 2026 adjusted operating expense forecast to a range between $2.7 billion and $2.825 billion. This guidance incorporates an additional $100 million allocated toward its Trump Accounts program. Operating margin concerns have become increasingly prominent. Despite the earnings shortfall, analyst support hasn’t evaporated entirely. Bernstein reaffirmed its Outperform rating with a $130 price objective, highlighting Robinhood’s expansion into prediction markets and banking services as potential long-term value drivers. Analyst price targets currently span from $110 to $170 across major firms. User growth metrics presented a more balanced picture. Robinhood concluded Q1 with 27.4 million funded accounts and 4.3 million Gold subscription members — representing 36% growth. Net customer deposits reached $17.7 billion. HOOD shares remain 68% higher over the trailing 12-month period, though they’ve declined 27% year-to-date. Wednesday’s selloff intensifies what has already proven a challenging 2026. Polymarket probabilities placed the likelihood of HOOD finishing Wednesday in negative territory at 98%. Later Wednesday, the Federal Reserve concludes its latest policy meeting — Jerome Powell’s final gathering as chair — while Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft all release quarterly results after market close.