Robinhood cutting about 23% of jobs, releases second-quarter earnings

Robinhood cutting about 23% of jobs, releases second-quarter earnings


Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev said Tuesday in a press release that the fintech company will reduce its headcount by approximately 23%.

The layoffs will be primarily in operations, marketing and program management. In the release, Tenev blamed “deterioration of the macro environment, with inflation at 40-year highs accompanied by a broad crypto market crash.”

Robinhood laid off 9% of its workforce in April.

“I want to acknowledge how unsettling these types of changes are,” Tenev said.

The Robinhood website home screen on a smartphone.

Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

In the release, Tenev said the company would flatten its organizational structure to give new general managers broad responsibility for its businesses. He also said that affected employees would receive an email and a Slack message letting them know if they were being let go or still had a job, immediately after an all-hands meeting to discuss the move on Thursday.

The company also released its earnings report for the second quarter, one day earlier than expected. Here’s how it did.

  • Revenue: $318 million vs. $321 million estimated, according to Refinitiv
  • Loss: 34 cents per share vs. 37 cents estimated, according to Refinitiv

Robinhood’s total net revenue of $318 million was up from $299 million in the first quarter, thanks to an increase in revenue from cryptocurrency activities and net interest. However, that revenue number was still well below the $565 million reported in the second quarter of 2021.

The report also showed a decline in monthly active users and assets under custody.

Robinhood has seen growth reverse as the pandemic boom in retail trading appeared to lose steam.

The company went public in July 2021 at $38 per share, and its stock jumped as high as $85 per share in its first month of trading.

However, the stock quickly declined. Shares of Robinhood are down 48% year to date and closed at $9.23 per share Tuesday.

Shares were down about 2% in after-hours trading.

— Jesse Pound contributed to this report.



Source

CNBC Daily Open: Debt worries continue to weigh on AI-related stocks
Technology

CNBC Daily Open: Debt worries continue to weigh on AI-related stocks

Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York City, U.S., Dec. 15, 2025. Brendan McDermid | Reuters U.S. stocks of late have been shaky as investors turn away from artificial intelligence shares, especially those related to AI infrastructure, such as Oracle, Broadcom and CoreWeave. The worry is that those […]

Read More
Merriam-Webster declares ‘slop’ its word of the year in nod to growth of AI
Technology

Merriam-Webster declares ‘slop’ its word of the year in nod to growth of AI

The logos of Google Gemini, ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, Claude by Anthropic, Perplexity, and Bing apps are displayed on the screen of a smartphone in Reno, United States, on November 21, 2024. Jaque Silva | Nurphoto | Getty Images Merriam-Webster declared “slop” its 2025 word of the year on Monday, a sign of growing wariness around […]

Read More
Former iRobot CEO calls Roomba maker’s bankruptcy ‘a tragedy for consumers’
Technology

Former iRobot CEO calls Roomba maker’s bankruptcy ‘a tragedy for consumers’

Colin Angle, co-founder and CEO of iRobot Corp., speaks during a Prime Air delivery drone reveal event in Las Vegas, June 5, 2019. Joe Buglewicz | Bloomberg | Getty Images Colin Angle, co-founder and former CEO of iRobot, on Monday said the company’s move to declare bankruptcy was “profoundly disappointing” and “nothing short of a […]

Read More