Why Robinhood is a better stock than Coinbase despite a 180% surge this year: Analyst

by skolnes


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In the Coinbase (COIN) vs. Robinhood (HOOD) investor debate, there is fodder for both bulls and bears.

But for veteran fintech analyst Dan Dolev at Mizuho Securities, Robinhood remains an undefeated name with room to grow.

“They’re in the early stages of becoming one of the top financial services companies in the world,” he told Yahoo Finance executive editor Brian Sozzi during the Opening Bid podcast (see video above; listen below). “There is no millennial, Gen Alpha, any of the [18- to 30-year-olds] that does not know what Robinhood is globally,” Dolev said. “It’s an amazing brand.”

Dolev rated Robinhood an Outperform with a $60 price target, estimating a 50% upside to the stock price from its current levels of $39. The average Wall Street price target on Robinhood is $44, according to Yahoo Finance data.

Robinhood — which has won this year’s Yahoo Finance Comeback of the Year award due to its big turn to profitability, innovative product releases, and a 180% stock price jump — has undergone a seismic shift since its upstart beginnings in meme stocks in 2013.

It famously made headlines in 2021 when traders stepped in to pour billions of dollars into companies like Gamestop (GME) and AMC (AMC) at a time when they were being shorted elsewhere. Everyday consumers cheered for the platform, with some speculating it was living up to its namesake storybook folk hero, Robin Hood.

Mizuho’s Dolev began covering the company about three years ago, when “people thought it was a bunch of kids that had no idea what they’re doing.”

Today, Robinhood is a different company.

With a combination of product drops, a new desktop trading platform, high interest rates, a crypto surge, and a leaner expense base, Robinhood is reporting banner earnings.

Its third quarter revenue grew 36% year over year to $637 million. Net earnings improved sharply to $150 million from an $85 million loss a year ago.

Average revenue per user (ARPU) increased by 31% to $105. Gold subscribers hit 2.2 million. Total funded customers reached 24.3 million, up 1 million from last year.

For the nine months ended Sept. 30, total revenue increased 39% to $1.9 billion. Net income has swung from a loss of $571 million to a profit of $495 million.

“I remember when we entered the public markets, it was sort of at the height of the secular bull market and we felt good,” Robinhood co-founder and CEO Vlad Tenev told Sozzi in an interview. “But the business now is much stronger across pretty much all dimensions. We have nine business lines that are generating over $100 million in annual revenue.”

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