Robinhood posts 44% slump in revenue, further slashes headcount by 23% | Inquirer Business

Robinhood posts 44% slump in revenue, further slashes headcount by 23%

/ 08:50 AM August 03, 2022

Robinhood logo

The logo of Robinhood Markets Inc. is seen at a pop-up event on Wall Street after the company’s IPO in New York City, U.S., July 29, 2021. File photo/REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

Robinhood Markets Inc said on Tuesday it was slashing 23 percent of its staff as it posted a 44-percent decline in revenue on slumping trading activity, in an earnings announcement that came a day earlier than scheduled and beat analyst expectations.

The Menlo Park, California-based brokerage posted net revenue for the second quarter ended June 30 of $318 million as revenue from equity, options and crypto trading more than halved, compared with $565 million a year earlier, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

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The company said it would commence another round of layoffs affecting 780 employees, on top of the 9 percent of full-time staff laid off earlier this year. It will also change its organizational structure to drive greater cost discipline.

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Robinhood’s total operating expenses for the second quarter rose 22 percent on the same period last year. The reorganization will cost the firm between $30 million to $40 million, Robinhood said.

The company posted a net loss of $295 million. Stripping out the restructuring charges, Robinhood reported a loss of 32 cents per share versus analyst estimates of a loss of 37 cents per share, according to Refinitiv IBES data.

It was originally scheduled to report earnings on Aug. 3, but released them a day early after publishing a blog post about the job cuts and reorganization.

Robinhood’s shares were down nearly 1 percent at $9.15 in after-hours trading.

Robinhood’s easy-to-use interface made it a hit among young investors trading from home on cryptocurrencies and stocks such as GameStop Corp during the COVID-19 pandemic.

But its customer base has been spooked by decades-high inflation and rising interest rates, which have sucked liquidity out of global markets and sent cryptocurrencies slumping.

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Robinhood is one of many fintech upstarts that have started slashing jobs ahead of an expected recession, along with crypto exchange Coinbase Global Inc., buy-now-pay-later company Klarna and NFT platform OpenSea, while a handful of crypto companies including Celsius Network and Voyager Digital collapsed amid the broader crypto crash.

Robinhood chief executive officer Vlad Tenev said in a blog post Tuesday that staff cuts earlier this year had not gone far enough.

“As CEO, I approved and took responsibility for our ambitious staffing trajectory – this is on me,” Tenev said.

Transaction-based revenues across Robinhood’s three main business lines of options, equities and cryptocurrencies fell 55 percent , with crypto transaction revenue, which had buffered the company’s results last year, falling 75 percent year-on-year.

Robinhood’s monthly active users also appeared to fall by roughly a third, at 14 million for June 2022 compared with 21.3 million in the second quarter of 2021.

Fintech stocks bore the brunt of a broader market decline as a risk-off environment coupled with higher funding costs and sluggish e-commerce growth led to traders pull back from high-growth tech so far this year.

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Shares of Robinhood, which were sold at $38 a share in its initial public offering last year, were also caught in the crosshairs of the crypto meltdown and have shed nearly 88 percent.

TAGS: brokerage, crypto, downsizing, equity trading

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