Robinhood Crypto Revenue Expected to Fall in Q1 After Record Late 2024 Gain: JPMorgan
After a 700% surge in Q4 crypto revenue, analysts now expect a pullback in Q1 as trading activity slows.

What to know:
- JPMorgan analyst Ken Worthington forecasts a decline in Robinhood’s crypto trading revenue in the first quarter amid weaker market sentiment.
- It's a sharp contrast to the fourth quarter of 2024, where crypto led a jump in the broker's transaction-based revenue.
- Worthington trimmed his year-end price target to $44 from $45, while maintaining his neutral rating on the stock.
Robinhood’s (HOOD) record crypto trading revenue from the last quarter of 2024 may prove hard to repeat, according to JPMorgan analyst Kenneth Worthington, who forecast a drop in digital asset volumes for the first quarter of this year.
The online trading platform reports first quarter results after the U.S. market close on Wednesday.
The fourth quarter's staggering 700% surge in cryptocurrency trading revenue was behind a sizable jump in HOOD's overall transaction-based revenue. Worthington, however, sees that momentum stalling in the first quarter, citing a decline in both equity and crypto markets, especially in the latter half of the quarter.
Worthington and team estimate Robinhood users traded about $52 billion in crypto during the quarter, down from $71 billion in Q4. Worthington attributes the drop to a “risk-off” environment that erased much of the market’s gains since the start of the year. Robinhood’s assets under custody (AUC) are expected to fall 5% from the prior quarter to $183.3 billion, though still up 41% year-over-year.
While the report highlights strong retail buying in early April following tariff-related news from Washington, Worthington suggests that activity may not be enough to lift first quarter results. He warns that softer demand for margin and derivatives trading — also seen at competitor Interactive Brokers — could weigh on Robinhood’s overall performance.
Worthington maintained a neutral rating on the stock and trimmed his price target by $1 to $44, suggesting about 10% downside from the current price just below $49.
Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
More For You
Bitcoin is about to log its longest losing streak since 2022 as geopolitical nerves hit risk trades

Geopolitical tensions lift the U.S. dollar and crude prices, adding pressure to an already fragile crypto market.
What to know:
- Escalating tensions in the Middle East have lifted both the U.S. dollar index and WTI crude, tightening financial conditions and pressuring risk assets.
- Bitcoin is on track to post its fifth consecutive weekly decline, a streak not seen since March to May 2022.











