Online brokerage firm Robinhood will lay off nearly a quarter of its employees, citing a continued deterioration of the macro environment and a broad crypto market crash.
The bad news came in a Tuesday blog post from co-founder and CEO Vlad Tenev, on the same day the firm released tepid Q2 financial results and the New York State Department of Financial Services announced a $30 million fine for the company’s crypto branch due to alleged Anti-Money Laundering, cybersecurity and consumer protection violations.
Tenev wrote that the layoffs would impact all functions in the company, particularly operations, marketing, and program management, with around 23% of the staff let go.
The Financial Times estimated the number of employees impacted to be around 780.
Robinhood laid off 9% of its staff earlier this year, but Tenev said the cuts “did not go far enough.”
He pointed to economic conditions and the collapse of the crypto market as factors in the move, stating:
“This has further reduced customer trading activity and assets under custody.”
In addition, the company had wrongly assumed the heightened engagement seen during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic would continue. Tenev wrote:
“As CEO, I approved and took responsibility for our ambitious staffing trajectory — this is on me.”
The company issued its quarterly financial results a day earlier than scheduled.
Results were disheartening, with $318 million in net revenue, down 44% year-on-year, although up 6% over the last quarter. Net loss was $295 million, narrowed from a net loss of $502 million in Q2 2021.
Monthly active users were down 1.9 million from last quarter to 14.0 million in June, and assets under custody dropped 31% to $64.2 billion in that time.
Revenue from cryptocurrency rose 7% quarter-on-quarter to $58 million, however.
Robinhood enjoyed a significant spike in share price in May after FTX founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried paid $650 million for a 7.6% stake in the company.
Share prices fell more than 4% Tuesday in after-hours trading, according to the Financial Time. - Cointelegraph
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