
Robinhood, the stock and cryptocurrency trading platform, announced on Tuesday that its board has approved a new $1.5 billion stock buyback plan, marking the company’s largest single buyback authorization to date. Despite Robinhood (HOOD) stock rising over 77% in the past year, the stock price fell about 5% on the day of the announcement.
This is Robinhood’s third buyback authorization since 2024, with a total of $3 billion authorized across all three, showing a clear trend of increasing scale.
May 2024: Board approved a $1 billion buyback plan
April 2025: Board approved an additional $500 million buyback plan
March 2026 (this time): Board approved a $1.5 billion buyback plan, the largest among the three
Robinhood management stated that they plan to execute this $1.5 billion authorization over the next approximately three years, emphasizing flexibility to accelerate the process if market conditions require. The cumulative $3 billion buyback authorization demonstrates management’s clear strategic intent to continue returning value to shareholders through buybacks amid ongoing stock price appreciation.
In addition to stock buybacks, Robinhood has been actively expanding its cryptocurrency-related businesses in recent years, further blurring the lines between traditional finance and decentralized finance.
In on-chain stock trading, Robinhood is advancing 24/7 trading, allowing users to trade stocks continuously even when traditional exchanges are closed; in tokenized assets, it provides tokenized investment channels for large private companies to non-U.S. customers; at the infrastructure level, Robinhood recently launched Robinhood Chain, an Ethereum Layer 2 testnet built on Arbitrum, marking its official entry into building blockchain infrastructure.
These moves, alongside stock buybacks, form Robinhood’s dual-track development strategy: on one hand, consolidating existing shareholder interests; on the other, actively positioning for growth in the next phase of the crypto financial market.
HOOD’s stock fell about 5% on Tuesday, with the market’s immediate reaction to the buyback news being neutral. However, the more important context is that Robinhood’s stock has increased over 77% in the past year, and the $1.5 billion buyback authorization is based on this high stock price. This choice itself reflects management’s view: at the current valuation level, stock repurchases remain a long-term rational capital allocation strategy.
Management expects to execute this authorization over approximately three years, with flexibility to accelerate if market conditions require.
This is the third, with a total authorized amount of $3 billion—first authorized $1 billion in May 2024, second $500 million in April 2025, and now the largest at $1.5 billion.
CFO Shiv Verma stated that this authorization reflects the confidence of management and the board in the company’s “generational potential,” believing that at the current valuation, capital repurchase remains a reasonable way to create long-term value for shareholders.