Robinhood’s latest earnings report exposes a structural issue at the heart of crypto: It still struggles to generate stable, nonspeculative revenue despite years of growth, innovation and institutional acceptance. Crypto trading revenue is the lifeblood of platforms like Robinhood (as well as Coinbase , Gemini Space Station and Bullish — all of which will give their own financial updates in the coming weeks). But it’s inherently unstable. It’s highly cyclical, depends on trading volume and is largely driven by market sentiment instead of underlying economic activity. Therefore, Robinhood often trades like a crypto proxy — when prices and speculation are up, revenue is up. But when they cool, revenue softens just as quickly. That dynamic is now showing up in Robinhood’s results, which prompted a 14% drop in its stock in trading Wednesday. The company delivered a notable miss Tuesday night as crypto trading revenue collapsed by 47%. Meanwhile, user activity shifted toward other products — particularly event contracts, which surged 320% year over year to $147 million. Shares of Coinbase and Bullish each fell 7%, while Gemini tumbled 5%, in sympathy. Crypto’s slump The crypto update reflects a first-quarter slump in crypto prices, which have rebounded in April. Bitcoin and ether dropped about 22% and 29%, respectively, in that three-month period, dragged down by broader risk-off sentiment tied to the Iran war. Barclays analyst Benjamin Budish noted that unless there’s a price-driven resurgence, the core revenue engine could continue to stall. “On the crypto side the trend is more challenging,” he said in a note Wednesday. “Higher fee rates are paid by less active traders, and absent a more meaningful pickup in crypto asset prices, into which we have no visibility, it is hard to imagine this trend improving. Industry-wide crypto volumes continue to weaken into Q2.” Citizens analyst Devin Ryan echoed the same fragility, saying “crypto remains muted,” although he added “that could change with positive progress” on the market structure bill known as the Clarity Act — another external catalyst driving sentiment and speculation rather than usage of crypto products and technology. “On the other side of legislative progress, we believe broader engagement in the space will re-accelerate meaningfully with increasing demand in tokens connected to scaled blockchains (ETH, SOL, etc), with institutions leaning back in, which Robinhood will also benefit from given its ownership of the Bitstamp exchange,” which gives it direct exposure to institutional crypto activity, not just retail trading, Ryan said. Attempt to diversify Like Coinbase, Robinhood is pushing hard to diversify revenue streams beyond trading — focusing on subscriptions, interest income and prediction markets among other services to hedge against crypto’s volatility and stabilize earnings. The path forward is widely understood. Payments, tokenized assets and scalable on-chain financial activity could eventually provide the stability the industry lacks. “I want to get away from talking about the price of bitcoin or all of the other native crypto assets,” Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev said on the earnings call. “Our strategy is to take crypto infrastructure and apply it to assets that have real-world utility. That’s why we care so much about tokenization.” “We’re at the very beginning of what’s going to be a tokenization supercycle,” he added. In the meantime, growth is slowing while the competition is getting tougher, JPMorgan’s Kenneth Worthington noted. “We decrease our multiple given the deceleration observed in 1Q26 and 4Q25 results alongside an increasingly competitive environment Robinhood is operating in amid the rise of crypto, prediction markets, and tokenization,” he said in a note. Notably, he added, due to its asset growth and its being positioned closer to crypto-native platforms, “35x is still a meaningful premium vs. brokerage peers.” — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.