[NEW YORK] Robinhood Markets has moved past its meme stock days to become known as the go-to trading platform for retail investors of all stripes – crypto zealots, novice financiers and sophisticated speculators alike. Now it’s taking it a step further: It also wants to be your bank.
Robinhood will roll out checking and savings accounts later this year to its paying “Gold” subscribers, but with a few twists. The Menlo Park, California-based firm aims to be less of a traditional bank for its customers and more of a private banking-like experience, according to Deepak Rao, vice-president and general manager of Robinhood Money.
“You get these crazy products, you get really high interest rates,” Rao said. “Why don’t we do that, but we give it to everybody?”
While Robinhood is introducing bank-like services, it’s not a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)-insured bank itself. Instead, it will work with a partner institution to offer FDIC protection on consumers’ money. The firm said on its website that banking services will be provided by Coastal Community Bank.
The annual percentage yield on the high-yield savings account will likely hover around 4 per cent when the product rolls out, customers will have access to estate planning and tax advice and clients will be able to request cash to be delivered to their doorstep that day via the app, according to a Wednesday (Mar 26) statement. The last service is one that some legacy banks still have, but with a several-day lag time, Rao said.
The core banking services are another step in Robinhood’s ambitions to become a one-stop-shop for consumers’ financial needs, bringing investing, banking, retirement and other products all under the single brand. Chief executive officer Vlad Tenev outlined this goal at the firm’s December investor day, and since then, the cofirm has also rolled out sports-event contracts.
More in Robinhood’s traditional investing lane, the firm is also unveiling a tailored wealth-management service, capping fees for its Gold subscribers at US$250 a year. The offering will give consumers access to both single stocks and exchange-traded funds and minimise taxable gains, with Gold customers able to access it now and all customers able to access it next month. All clients will pay a 0.25 per cent management fee, according to the statement.
“How can we take the best of all the models that are out there, from a human adviser who can provide you guidance and reassurance to robo-advisers that don’t provide you guidance and reassurance but at least give you a low-cost, easy way to access advice,” said Steph Guild, president of Robinhood asset management and senior director of investment strategy for Robinhood financial. “We thought we’d take the best of those models and create something that does not exist today.”
The wealth-management services will be augmented by an artificial intelligence offering, called Robinhood Cortex, which will give investors analysis and insights to optimise their portfolios. BLOOMBERG