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Robinhood aims to court users with 1% interest rate on cash

25 points| prostoalex | 3 years ago |techcrunch.com | reply

42 comments

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[+] Ozzie_osman|3 years ago|reply
I love how all these companies offering high-interest accounts basically use two tricks in their playbook. First, they use the old "16x as much interest" which is technically true, but really 16x a number that is basically zero, sounds much better than it is.

Second, they offer these rates for a little bit then when people have switched over and would be too lazy to switch back, they drop the yield again.

[+] CameronNemo|3 years ago|reply
The second point is not my experience with two institutions (a credit union, and Robinhood). In both cases they consistently tracked the federal funds rate, raising and lowering my account interest as market conditions changed. There has been no rug pull. For several years.
[+] seattle_spring|3 years ago|reply
At least one competitor has 1.25% with minimal strings. I think Robinhood is going to have to do better if they want a meaningful amount of folks to park their cash with them.
[+] CameronNemo|3 years ago|reply
Lots of competitors have better rates with strings attached. But among the major brokerages, interest on cash positions is unusual. And even HYSAs are not cracking 1% yet AFAIK.
[+] hbcondo714|3 years ago|reply
Mind mentioning the competitors?
[+] CameronNemo|3 years ago|reply
I was wondering about this. RobinHood has offered interest on uninvested cash for a while. Once rates were dialed down, nobody seemed to care, but now that rates are going up it is more important.

Recently when they announced their new card program, they mentioned that they would no longer be paying interest on cash. I am grandfathered into the new card program, but I was still thinking of leaving the brokerage before they kicked me off.

I got an email last week saying they increased their interest rate for uninvested cash. I was wondering if that was just for the old program or it was part of their future plans.

This is a nice clarification. I think.

Edit: this page seems to have changed since I last read it: https://robinhood.com/us/en/support/articles/difference-betw... Specifically the interest rate portion. Looks like they are including this in the new cash/card system they have.

[+] londons_explore|3 years ago|reply
Surely with robinhood you can buy lots of bonds and bond-like government backed securities which have returns over 1%?

Edit:. I put this comment here a few days ago.... And suddenly it says '19 minutes ago'. What happened?

[+] jakear|3 years ago|reply
Story probably resurrected in the “second chance queue” and comments ported over.
[+] vmception|3 years ago|reply
Maybe this post was given a second chance?? Not sure
[+] kgwgk|3 years ago|reply
And then you don't have cash.
[+] prostoalex|3 years ago|reply
Principal risk, though.
[+] hackernewds|3 years ago|reply
More trickery to separate impulsive amateur retail investors from their savings
[+] CameronNemo|3 years ago|reply
Ah yes, all those impulsive amateurs signing up for HYSAs and holding large sums of cash where this actually matters.
[+] travisjungroth|3 years ago|reply
What’s the plan for Robinhood to make money? Brokerages used to make it on fees, but now everything is no-fee. Can make it on payment-for-order-flow, but that seems to be under attack. Then you can make it on the 0% money sitting around, but that’s harder if you also want to be high yield.
[+] nixass|3 years ago|reply
They make money by being a middle man between investors and market makers, giving market makers precious real time data
[+] d23|3 years ago|reply
I'll never trust them with another dollar of my money after what happened last year. Letting people buy options and then turning off the ability to sell them to anyone else on the platform.
[+] zionic|3 years ago|reply
Wasn’t it the other way? They stopped letting people buy but let them sell.

Some say this was deliberate as their major investors/partners were short and getting obliterated.

[+] _Algernon_|3 years ago|reply
Combined with inflation that makes for -7.3%/year. Generous!
[+] hamiltonians|3 years ago|reply
2 year treasuries paying close to 3%. not bad
[+] lvl102|3 years ago|reply
They really need to tap into the 401(k) market but we all know how that is going to end for retail investors…
[+] CameronNemo|3 years ago|reply
IRAs would be way easier, right? Do Vanguard or Schwab do 401ks/403bs? I thought only Fidelity had started in on that market.
[+] vkhn|3 years ago|reply
Except if you’re a pattern day trader (even with more than 25k) in which case you get the middle finger and nothing. Zero interest. Which is ridiculous because they make more money on these people.
[+] JumpCrisscross|3 years ago|reply
If someone is pattern day trading on Robinhood, they’re not likely to notice let alone be deterred by such details.