Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Robinhood third quarter earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your touchtone telephone. Please be advised that today's conference may be recorded. Should you require any further assistance, please press star zero. I would now like to hand the conference over to your host, Head of Capital Markets and Investor Relations, Irvin Shah. Please go ahead.
Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us for Robinhood's third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. With us today are CEO and Co-founder, Vlad Tenev, and CFO, Jason Warnick. Before getting started, I wanna remind you that today's presentation will contain forward-looking statements about Robinhood's outlook for the fourth quarter, as well as our strategic and operational plans. Actual results could differ materially from our expectations. Potential risk factors that could cause differences are described in our press release issued this afternoon, the related slide presentation on our investor relations website, our Form 10-Q filed August 18, 2021, and in our other SEC filings. All information on the call is as of today, October 26, 2021, and we undertake no duty to update it for subsequent events, except as required by law.
As we discuss our results, all percentage growth comparisons will be to the same period in the prior year, unless otherwise noted. Today's discussion will also include non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations to the GAAP results we consider most comparable can be found in the earnings presentation on our investor relations website at investors.robinhood.com. With that, let me turn it over to Vlad.
Thanks, Irvin, and thank you all for joining. Let me first start by discussing growth. In Q3, net cumulative funded accounts were 22.4 million, up 97% year-over-year and slightly off versus Q2. As we previewed last quarter, in Q3, we saw considerably fewer new funded accounts and lower revenue as compared to Q2. In Q3, we added 660,000 new funded accounts, bringing our total additions for the year to 11.4 million, nearly doubling our customer base since the end of last year. It's been an incredible year, and we are still very early in our journey of democratizing finance for all. Looking back at Q2, we saw huge interest in crypto, especially DOGE, leading to large numbers of new customers joining the platform and record revenues.
In Q3, crypto activity came off record highs, leading to fewer new funded accounts and lower revenue, as expected. Historically, our growth has come in waves. The surges have come during periods of increased volatility or market events. We've also seen that new customers join when we add new products and features, giving us some degree of control over our growth. Going forward, we expect to see these patterns persist. Jason will talk more about growth, our financials, and our fourth quarter outlook in just a moment. For more than a year, we've devoted a significant majority of our resources to safety first initiatives, most notably platform stability and service reliability. We've seen massive increases in new customers and trading activity over the past year, and I believe we have never been in a better position to serve these new customers.
We've also made huge strides in expanding our pool of top engineering talent. With the progress we've made on those two fronts, we think we now have much greater flexibility to allocate resources to new product development, and we're starting to see the results from that. As I did last time, I'd like to cover our progress organized by our values. As a reminder, our top values are safety first, participation is power, radical customer focus, and first principles thinking. Beginning with safety first, we've continued to make substantial progress on customer support and educational content. We want Robinhood to be the most trusted financial institution. This will take time, but we believe we are making good progress. For example, I'm incredibly proud that we successfully rolled out 24/7 live phone support in our app.
Customers can request a call back at any time of the day for help on any topic, and I'm really excited to say that our support team also serves crypto, making us the first major crypto platform to provide 24/7 live phone support. We're also heavily leveraging proprietary technology to increase the efficiency of this service. Our interactive triage flow can pinpoint where support is needed, connecting customers with a representative who can provide a fast and personalized resolution. Our next step is to expand phone support to customers who aren't in the app. We're working on this and plan to roll it out in the coming months. We're also continuing to build educational content that helps new investors become long-term investors.
Following last quarter's rollout of in-app educational modules, we've added more tools and features that help our customers better understand the market, investing, and our app, all in ways that are contextually relevant for them. For example, to help customers learn more about options, we will soon enable them to set up hypothetical trades and see how their trades perform over time. This gives customers a way to gain practical knowledge and confidence before investing their money. We're also beginning to integrate Robinhood Snacks, our digestible financial news content, directly into our app. Snacks is one of the most widely consumed financial newsletters, with over 23 million unique readers in Q3. We're excited to deliver this content to more and more of our customers to help them stay informed of the top financial news. Over time, we'll be finding more ways to integrate Snacks with Robinhood.
We think there are a lot of exciting synergies here. We've entered into our first big content distribution partnership, making Robinhood Snacks available on Snapchat to their millions of users. Together, we have created one of the first finance education channels delivered on Snap's Discover tab. We're really excited to extend the reach of Robinhood Snacks and are pleased to be working with the team at Snap. Now turning to participation as power. We have continued expanding access to financial markets for all our customers. Customers are really loving the ability to participate in IPOs through Robinhood. As of today, we've partnered with 12 companies across a wide range of industries that have made their IPOs available to Robinhood customers.
Six of these companies have crossed 30 days since their listing on the platform, and we continue to see our customers holding over 80% of their allotted shares 30 days post-IPO. This gives us confidence that more and more issuers will view our platform as a great way to reach retail shareholders. In this quarter, we began integrating Say events into our app, giving customers improved access to annual shareholder meetings, product launch events, and company Q&A forums. Just this month, for the first time, Robinhood customers used Say to ask questions that were then answered live during an annual shareholder meeting. Going forward, we see an opportunity to continue building on this momentum to revolutionize the way retail shareholders connect with the companies they own. This is truly an exciting moment for retail investors. On to radical customer focus.
We've been ramping up the pace of product development this quarter. We've opened the wait list for crypto wallets. This has been one of the most requested features from our customers, and we're excited that over 1 million customers have signed up to date. We're making our wallets feature simple and intuitive, and expect to begin introducing this to customers in the coming weeks. We also introduced recurring investments for crypto, which is a great way for customers to automatically build their positions over time without having to stress about timing the market. Of course, we are very excited to offer our crypto customers 24/7 live phone support directly from the app. I should mention, we're keeping a close eye on crypto as the regulatory landscape is increasingly uncertain.
We're aiming to deliver great new crypto features for customers while being mindful of keeping our platform safe and introducing products that comply with legal and regulatory requirements. Crypto is still very early, and we're excited to be investing in our platform here. Looking ahead, I'd like to share a few upcoming products and features that we're excited about. Just last week, we started rolling out our new recommendations engine, which will help new customers select their first investment. This feature not only helps our customers get started, but also helps educate them on things like ETFs and the importance of diversification. We're also getting very close to making it possible for customers to transfer existing investments from other brokerages into Robinhood. This is called ACATS In, and until now, our ACATS functionality has only been available for outbound transfers.
This will change that, and I'm eager to see this launch. Finally, before I turn this over to Jason, I'd like to highlight that as part of our new product roadmap, we're committed to delivering tax-advantaged accounts for retirement. We know this is important for our customers, and our teams are hard at work to make this a reality. We aren't ready yet to provide a timeline, but we look forward to updating you on our progress. We're still very early in our journey. We're continuing to invest for the long- term and remain focused on our vision of building a single money app for our customers. With that, let me turn it over to Jason to discuss our financial results.
Thanks, Vlad. In Q3, net cumulative funded accounts were 22.4 million, up 97% year-over-year and slightly down versus Q2. Monthly active users were 18.9 million, up 76% year-over-year, and assets under custody were $95.4 billion, up 115% year-over-year. MAU and AUC each declined sequentially off our record Q2. During the quarter, we added 660,000 new funded accounts, bringing our total additions for the year to 11.4 million. Churn was 870,000 accounts, improving on a percentage basis versus the first two quarters of 2021. I'm happy to see churn come back more in line with what we were seeing in 2020. Offsetting churn, 110,000 customers returned to Robinhood during the quarter.
In Q3, customers contributed $2.3 billion in net deposits. Now let's turn to revenue. Total net revenues were $365 million in Q3, up 35% year-over-year, but down sequentially as expected. Looking at the components of revenue, transaction-based revenues were $267 million in Q3, which is down sequentially but up 32% year-over-year. Equities revenue was $50 million, down 27% year-over-year. Options revenue was $164 million, up 29%. Crypto revenue was $51 million, up 860% year-over-year. While crypto came off record highs from Q2, it significantly exceeded last year's Q3 level. Looking at trading activities, there are a few call-outs.
Customers placing trades were up year-over-year, 24% for equities, 11% for options, and 287% for crypto. During the quarter, equities DARTs were down 4% year-over-year, options DARTs were flat, and crypto DARTs were up 340%. Notional volumes traded per trader were down 39% for equities and up 124% for crypto, while average options contracts per trader were up 18%. Moving to assets under custody. Equities AUC was $69 billion, up 83%. Options AUC was $1.4 billion, up 4%, and crypto AUC increased to $22 billion versus $1.1 billion in the prior year. As a reminder, the cryptocurrency market is extremely volatile, and we anticipate these conditions are likely to persist.
As for cash management, the product continues to get traction, reaching 5.5 million customers, up 293% year- over- year. 25 of our funded customer accounts now use our cash management product, and this is an area we are excited to keep investing in. Moving to net interest revenues. They were $63 million for the quarter, up 26%. Primary components include securities lending, which totaled $33 million, up 20% year- over- year, but down sequentially. Margin interest, which totaled $34 million in the quarter, up 61% year- over- year. Interest expense, which was a $6 million offset to net interest revenues in Q3. Our margin book reached $6.1 billion at the end of the quarter, an increase of 168%.
At the end of the quarter, 256,000 customers held a margin balance, representing about 1% of our net cumulative funded accounts. For other revenues, they increased 101% to $34 million, driven largely by year-over-year growth in our Gold subscriptions. Now for operating expenses. I'd like to remind you that beginning with our IPO, we are now recording share-based compensation from RSUs within each of our operating expense line items. In total, our share-based compensation for Q3 totaled $1.2 billion, which includes a cumulative charge totaling $1 billion recorded at the time of the IPO. It will make our year-over-year comparisons for OpEx a bit challenging, so I encourage you to check out the investor presentation for details on SBC included in each operating line.
We continue to make progress building our teams with increases primarily in engineering, customer service, and our regulatory and compliance teams. In the quarter, we added 580 new full-time employees across the company, growing 21% sequentially versus Q2. We made sequential progress, reducing fraud losses down 23% versus Q2. We have more work to do here, and this is constantly evolving, but I'm proud of the progress our teams have made. Lastly, the team is working diligently to improve our operating leverage and efficiency. This is a long-term cultural commitment for us, and I'm confident we will deliver on this. Now let's turn to measures of profitability. Net loss for Q3 was $1.32 billion, which includes the $1.2 billion in share-based compensation. This compares to a net loss of $11 million in the prior year quarter.
An adjusted EBITDA was - $84 million, compared with +$59 million in the prior year quarter. As a reminder, adjusted EBITDA primarily excludes the impact of share-based comp. Now for Q4. We anticipate that total revenue will be less than $325 million and full year revenue will be less than $1.8 billion. At the top end, this implies full year revenue growth of 85%. Additionally, we expect new funded accounts in Q4 will be roughly in line with Q3. As you know, the market is uncertain and can be highly volatile, so these comments are assuming a steady state for what we've seen so far in these first few weeks of the quarter, and do not assume any changes to market volatility or incorporate any anticipation of exogenous events.
As a reminder, our industry sees a typical seasonality curve that shows higher growth in the first quarter of the year versus the last three quarters. Additionally, we continue to monitor regulatory developments relating to market structure matters, such as statements from the SEC on payment for order flow, cryptocurrency regulation, option trading due diligence, and digital engagement practices. We've remained focused on the long- term, and we're very excited about our product roadmap. We are introducing the next generation to investing and all things money, and we believe there's a big opportunity ahead of us. With that, Irvin, let's turn to Q&A.
Thanks, Jason. Leading into this quarter's Q&A session, we'll start again by answering the top questions from say, ranked by number of votes. We'll pass over any questions that were already addressed, and we'll group together questions that share a common theme. After that, we'll turn to live questions from the analyst community. Starting out, we have a number of questions from Sejan P, Christian B, Cesar S, and others around our plans and timeline for future crypto offerings, including new coins and earning interest on crypto. Vlad, do you have any color you'd like to share there?
Of course. Yes. Thank you for your questions, and we know that the community is really excited to see more features in our crypto offering. We hear this loud and clear. Our customers want new coins, the ability to deposit and withdraw, as well as ways to earn interest on their crypto. We mentioned in the release, we're excited about crypto wallets. Over 1 million customers are on the wait list for crypto wallets thus far, and this is coming soon. On new coins specifically, one thing to mention is that crypto wallets will allow customers to participate and take coins such as Bitcoin and Ethereum that they've purchased on Robinhood to participate in some of the other decentralized applications off-platform, which allow access to coins that we don't offer.
We actually believe that by rolling out wallets, we will go a long way towards addressing the primary pain point that customers feel right now. One other thing that we're mindful of, I mentioned this earlier in the release, the regulatory environment in terms of new coins and lending products in crypto is uncertain and evolving. We're having to carefully evaluate whether we can add new coins in a way that's safe for customers and in line with regulatory requirements. As you probably are aware, the Securities and Exchange Commission, other regulators, have raised questions about whether lending and staking features are actually unregistered securities offerings, whether a lot of the coins and tokens at other platforms are unregistered securities.
We feel very, very good about the coins that we're currently listing on our platform. For any new coins that we add, we wanna feel equally, if not more good. We're gonna be very careful. We're a regulated entity, and we're hopeful to get some clarity soon on coins. Until then, we'll continue to work with our regulators to hopefully land in a place where, you know, regulations allow for innovation and are applied evenly across the industry. The only other thing I'd mention is that we've been investing a lot in the crypto team. The team started out a year ago, as a fairly small team. They've done a lot of great work scaling the platform, and they've rolled out a lot of really exciting features.
not just the wallets wait list, but also recurring and 24/7 phone support. We're excited to keep innovating in this space, and there's much more to come here.
Great. Thanks. From Tushar T, "When will Robinhood support retirement accounts like 401(k)s and IRAs?
Yeah, I'll field this one too. Thank you, Tushar. As we mentioned, we are committed to support retirement accounts, IRAs specifically in the product roadmap. We don't have specific details on timeline yet, but I will tell you it's very much in line with our mission. We want to see everybody being an investor, and tax-advantaged accounts do a lot and are important for customers as a way to encourage long-term investing behavior. It's something we're excited about. We know it's mission aligned, and we can't wait to deliver a great product for our customers there.
Great. Next up, we have questions from Maxfield S. and Edward A. on whether we have any plans for extending trading hours, both before the market open and after hours.
Yeah. Thank you for this question. This is something we've heard a little bit. We do offer some extended trading hours right now, but are hearing from customers that they want those hours extended. Just some of the challenges in doing this, limited liquidity and wide spreads. We'll wanna make sure that we communicate to customers that conditions outside of normal trading hours may differ. I think this is incredibly important, especially given that many of our customers are investing for the first time. That said, we do hear customers on this, and I'm happy to say that teams are actively working on this. You should be hearing more from us on this in the coming months.
Sounds good. From Jason L, "How is Robinhood planning on becoming profitable long- term and competing with Square, etc ?" Maybe Jason, you wanna take this one?
Yeah, happy to take this. What I'd tell you right now is that we're really focused on investing for the future. You see us investing heavily in our teams, adding to, you know, the teams like engineering and customer support. You're gonna continue to see us investing for the future and not really focus on profitability at least in the near- term. What I will say, though, is when I look at our operating structure, I feel really good about our unit economics. I think we're set up to be a profitable company over the long- term, but right now that's just not our focus.
In terms of competition, what I'd tell you is that, you know, I think we're really well positioned to keep building for customers, and that's gonna be adding products and features that our customers love at values that are, you know, great for customers. Over time, we think that combined with our brand and our focus on safety first will help us be very competitive in the market.
Great. From Ramon D., "When will the Robinhood wallet be available to all?
Well, thank you for the question. This is one that we're excited to talk about. We've been making good progress on the wallets, and we're gonna be rolling out to the first set of external customers in the next few weeks. One of the interesting things about this rollout, getting to this point has taken a lot of great work from the teams. We're using this as an opportunity to make an experience that's traditionally been very cumbersome and complicated, and, you know, scary to some customers, easy and intuitive, while also introducing security hygiene in a way that's understandable. We anticipate the first launch, the first set of external customers to get a high-quality product. Moreover, we're excited to continue building this in public with the community.
Even though we wanna give people a high-quality product as the first set of customers, we'll take their feedback and report back to the community about what that feedback is and incorporate that into the product while it's rolling out. We do think the product will continue to improve, and we're excited to share the progress with the community. The aim is nothing short of rolling out the easiest to use, safest, and most delightful wallet experience for our customers. In the next few weeks, first set of external customers, and we expect to have wallets available to all customers in Q1 of next year.
Excellent. From Brian H., "How will Robinhood continue to generate income without PFOF?" Jason?
Yeah. PFOF has been getting quite a bit of regulatory attention, including specific comments from Chair Gensler talking about banning PFOF being on the table. I do think it's important to step back when thinking about PFOF to consider kinda where we've come from. You know, Robinhood led the way in commission-free trading, and that's led across the industry to save billions of dollars for investors, and millions of people are participating who previously weren't, including just a much more inclusive and diverse population of investors.
You know, we really think that, you know, as this question of PFOF is looked at, you know, we hope that, you know, as the SEC looks at the data, that they'll see, kinda the benefits that that PFOF has brought to the industry and to the millions of people who are now participating. Now in terms of the question, you know, I do think that over time, we're gonna be rolling out more products and services. We talked a little bit about retirement accounts. You know, we're investing in our cash management product and certainly crypto. We'll be diversifying our product selection over time. I would say that there's also an opportunity for us to participate more in the market making of the order flow, as I mentioned last quarter.
Lots of opportunities for us over time, and on PFOF, we're certainly paying close attention.
Great. Maybe time for one more question. This one comes from Brandon C., "Can you make an option to gift stocks to family and friends?" Vlad?
Yeah. Thank you, Brandon C. You know, this is something that we hear from customers from time to time. We don't have anything to share about gifting stocks on the roadmap right now, but stay tuned, and this is definitely something that we'll consider for the future.
Great. With that, I will ask the operator to open up the line.
As a reminder, to ask a phone question, please press star one on your touchtone telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Our first question comes from the line of Devin Ryan of JMP Securities. Your line is open.
Great. Good afternoon, Vlad, Jason, and Irv. I guess first question here, love to just maybe unpack the outlook a bit for the fourth quarter, in a couple points. I guess the first one on the comment on revenues, I appreciate, you know, there's a lot of uncertainty as we think about, you know, the next couple of months here. But it does seem like, you know, crypto volume's up meaningfully, at least in the industry. So I'm assuming, you know, maybe there's some offset or maybe you guys aren't seeing that. I'm just kinda curious if you can give a little more color around kind of what you're seeing in the revenue environment. In terms of new funded accounts, I appreciate, you know, how strong the first half was.
You know, is kind of the back half of the year and maybe more what you're seeing in the fourth quarter, is that a function of just pulling back a bit on marketing because it's just not as attractive or, you know, kind of big product launches? How should we think about just the outlook for new funded accounts relative to, you know, the marketing spend?
Thanks, Devin. I appreciate the questions. This is Jason. I'll go ahead and take that. You know, the first comment that I'd make on the revenue guidance is that, you know, it's based on what we've seen for just a few short weeks at the beginning of the quarter. You know, it's assuming that we don't see any changes in market volatility and no kind of exogenous events, if you will, in the market. You know, we wanted to be, you know, what we felt was appropriately conservative for our revenue guidance, particularly in the fact that, you know, we are facing seasonal headwinds and lower year-over-year volatility.
You know, in terms of crypto, it's very difficult to, you know, predict what we'll see, but what we did is incorporate what we've seen for the first couple of weeks of the quarter and incorporated that into the guidance. In terms of your question on marketing, I think that's a good one. When we look at marketing, particularly in environments where there is just generally lower volatility and less interest in investing, we've decided as a company to be cautious about, you know, chasing growth with marketing dollars. You know, you can always spend more to get more customers, but what we've seen is you tend to get lower intent customers at worse economics in these periods where there's just lower volatility and less interest.
That said, I think the opposite is also true, that in periods of higher volatility and higher interest in trading, we tend to lean a little bit more into it. Of course, as you know, we've got a tremendous referral network and we love the effectiveness of that. You know, you should just expect as a management team, we're gonna be cautious with the way that we approach our marketing dollars, so that the economics make sense, as well as the customers who join us have high intent.
Okay. Thanks, Jason. Just a follow-up here on the IPO Access business. You know, some really nice, I think, momentum there with 12 deals already, so, you know, clearly some pretty good proof of concept. You know, how do you guys see that progressing from here? What type of momentum do you have in the pipeline or conversations with companies? And then, you know, is the next step to be able to actually increase allocation, so you're getting on, you know, many more deals, but, you know, do you see a scenario where you can actually get a larger piece where you're a more meaningful piece of every deal?
Yeah. Thanks, Devin. You know, what I would say is, you know, it's still very early in the IPO Access product. What we've seen so far is incredibly encouraging. You heard the stats that Vlad had mentioned. You know, as we've talked to potential issuers, particularly early on, there was just a question of, well, how will Robinhood customers respond to receiving an allocation? Will they just quickly trade for a quick profit, or are they really in it for the longer- term? What we're seeing is that our customers are holding onto the shares. That's a really strong signal to issuers. You know, stepping back, just looking at the relationship between retail investors and the companies that they own, you know, IPO Access is an important piece of that.
I think the work that we're doing with Say is also important, and what we're trying to do is really revolutionize the way that investors are able to communicate with the companies that they own and ultimately be able to influence their policies, you know, and roadmaps and so on. Really excited about the momentum there. You know, our vision is that, you know, the vast majority of IPOs should be made available to retail investors, and I think we're building a strong case that Robinhood should be the conduit for that.
Yeah, I would just add, you know, I think Jason really put it well. We think that Robinhood is very well positioned to create an ecosystem between shareholders and the companies that they're investing in. You see through participating in the IPOs to investing post-IPO to engaging with the management teams, like on the Say platform, people are really becoming and behaving like owners in these enterprises, and we think that's a very positive thing for our economy, for these companies and the broader landscape. We're excited to invest more here.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Will Nance of Goldman Sachs. Your question, please.
Hey, guys. Good evening.
Good evening.
Good evening. Hi, Will.
Maybe I could start off with just a follow-up on some of the account trends that you saw this quarter. I mean, the attrition that we saw in net funded accounts, I mean, is the attrition concentrated in some of the more recent vintages, i.e., maybe some of the accounts that kind of opened around, you know, meme stocks and Dogecoin earlier in the year? I mean, any color on attrition rates on kind of pre-2021 cohorts?
Yeah, Will Nance, when we kind of look across the attrition that we've seen, not just in this period, but in prior periods, there really aren't any concentrations to call out. You know, we feel great about the attrition rate, particularly as it's coming back down to more normalized levels. We did see higher attrition at the beginning of the year around some of the market events. Again, as we look at the cohorts and the demographics of the churning customers, we're not seeing any concentrations. One thing that I've really like to see is returning customers and having 110,000 customers come back to us this period was also really encouraging.
We've seen that time and again that when customers have churned that we get a fairly good percentage of them coming back to us over time. I think that the work that we're doing around Safety First certainly all the improvements that we've made to our platform and site resiliency but also the 24/7 phone support goes straight to customer trust, and we think that that over time is gonna make a meaningful impact to churn.
Got it. Helpful. Appreciate that. Then maybe as a follow-up, just on the product pipeline for crypto, I guess, given some of the regulatory scrutiny, it sounds like maybe some of the newer products in crypto could be on hold. I'm just, you know, you guys have talked about prioritization in the past, and I know you have a lot on your plate in terms of new products that you could go after. I'm just kind of wondering how, you know, how this is impacting the pipeline and whether there's kind of a reprioritization. Any new products outside of crypto that maybe come to mind as maybe taking more of a center stage, you know, given some of the overhangs around crypto?
Yeah. I would just start, this is Vlad, by saying that I think we're still quite early in the crypto space. Robinhood sees a lot of opportunity ahead of us. You know, the wallets wait list, we're rolling that out, looking forward to getting that out to customers in the coming weeks. I think that unlocks, you know, an entirely new segment of the crypto space for Robinhood and for our customers. You know, they'll be able to send crypto off platform and really, you know, get access to the broader ecosystem that way. Recurring crypto, we're very excited to see that come out, and that's been a requested feature and something that allows customers to dollar cost average into crypto and not be as concerned about price volatility.
You know, 24/7 phone support for crypto, which is very unique in this space. We are, you know, we're certainly a long way from being finished with the crypto roadmap. We're closer to the beginning, and we see a ton of opportunity ahead of us to continue to deliver value to customers.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Ken Worthington of JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking the question. You attributed softer account openings to crypto. As we look at the account attrition this quarter, it was still at least reasonably elevated. Are you seeing the attrition in crypto accounts too? If we look at 3Q, any sense of what portion of the attrition was coming from customers who are ACATing their accounts versus customers whose assets were going to zero? To follow up on, oh gosh, I think it might have been Will's question before. In terms of account growth in 2019 and 2020, account growth was still reasonably good in the second half of those years.
I hear what you're saying about seasonality, but it also seems like Robinhood sort of grew through that seasonality in prior years. Particularly, I think it was in 2019 that realized volatility was substantially lower than what we're seeing in October today. Is there something else going on beyond seasonality or volatility that might be weighing on growth? Thanks.
Yeah. Thanks, Ken. I appreciate the questions. You know, similar to my earlier comments on attrition, we're not seeing any concentrations, including at a product level that would suggest that there's any specific source of concentration in the attrition that we're seeing. In terms of ACATS, we saw that come down, you know, over 30% versus the ACATS that we saw in Q2, so really good progress there. I think that's really owing, you know, to, you know, we had a volatile first half of the year, you know, elevated attrition, elevated ACATS out. I think what we're seeing now is it's beginning to normalize.
I think that the efforts that we're putting into Safety First is certainly contributing to that normalization of departures. In terms of account growth, you know, at a macro level, what I tell you is that, you know, we don't expect our growth to be linear. You know, we certainly have seasonal headwinds right now. There's lower volatility by nearly 30% year-over-year. Both of those headwinds are absolutely contributing to what we're seeing. There's nothing else that I would point to. You know, we look at our share of new app downloads that continues to be strong, and we're taking an outsized share.
You know, what I tell you is that, you know, we expect kind of our growth not to be linear. It should ebb and flow with market conditions. The things that we can control are really, you know, new product launches and making sure customers have just a great experience when they're here. Really, continuing to be very optimistic. There's a long-term trend of increasing retail participation, and I think we're, you know, positioned really well to benefit from that.
Yeah, I would just add to that you know, over the past 1.5 years through the pandemic and the first part of 2020, we've been a little bit, you know, on our back foot coping with the huge growth in new customers and trading revenue, and we've had to allocate significant resources towards scaling and improving operations and customer support. The benefit of slightly reduced volatility is that, you know, we have a lot more breathing room to work on new products and features for customers. We're excited to deliver those, and we think that customers will really enjoy what we're coming out with.
Thank you very much.
Thanks, Ken.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Richard Repetto of Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good evening, Vlad, and good evening, Jason. I was just gonna ask, and you did include a lot in the earnings release, but is there any way you could walk us through, Jason, the lock-up release? I know it has a lot of, what do you call it? Legalese in it, but a little bit more simplified of what comes unlocked over the next couple days as well as, you know, next five weeks.
Happy to, Rich. You know, as is pretty customary with IPOs, as we all know, we all have to deal with lockup releases and the implications to float. Just kind of at the highest level. We have about 68 million tradable shares that are out on the market today. Tomorrow, on October 27th, we have half of what we call tranche 1 of the converts becoming unlocked, as well as some shares from employees that unlock according to the lockup schedule. That's 49 million shares relating to the shares received on tranche 1 of the converts and another 13 million shares that'll be subject to trading windows, of course, but relating to employees.
You know, roughly 62 million out tomorrow that will come out. 68 million right now, about 62 million coming out tomorrow. Fast-forward to November 10th, and then the other 49 million, so the other half of tranche 1 shares, will begin to be tradable. That'll be another 49 million. You move forward to December 1st, and that's where all shares will be now fully tradable.
Got it. That's very helpful. Thanks, Jason.
Absolutely. Yeah, you bet.
Vlad, just one follow-up question on the new funded account stuff. You know, you're very helpful in giving us, you know, sort of the Dogecoin breakout in the second quarter, and you know, you got a great contribution, you know, from the trading activity there. I was just wondering whether, you know, do you follow like how many new funded accounts, or do you even follow that came from this, you know, the big uptick in Dogecoin in 2Q?
In Q2?
To try to-
There were millions of new funded accounts that came for cryptocurrencies, you know, particularly Dogecoin in Q2. Certainly it was a meaningful portion of the new accounts in that period.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Josh Beck of KeyBanc. Your line is open.
Thank you, team, for taking the question. I wanted to go back to the crypto wallet launch. Obviously, it's really encouraging to see that type of wait list at this stage of the product. As it's launched, what do you really think will be the distinctive elements of the offering versus maybe some of the other wallets that are out there?
Yeah, for sure. I think that, you know, we're gonna start with simplicity and security. We really want customers to know not just wallets, but Robinhood in general as the safest, most trusted, and easiest to use place to work with your investments in crypto. I think wallets is, you know, really no different. I think that a lot of products in the market are complex. They're tricky to use. They make customers nervous, you know, when they're transacting crypto and sending it back and forth. I think we can really bring our design and engineering to bear on some of these problems. You know, it's not gonna be just a single launch.
As I mentioned earlier in one of the answers to the retail questions, we're excited to build this in public and to solicit feedback, and we think that the product will keep getting better and better. Based on that feedback, we'll continue to solve customers' pain points and improve the experience.
Great. Well, look forward to watching that evolution. Yeah, my follow-up is about this ACATS-in launch . I'm just curious, as that comes to market, would you expect that to be a friction point that you're removing, you know, more so with new customers? Is it gonna be an AUC driver for existing customers? Just curious how that could potentially impact the model as it's launched.
Yeah, for sure. I'll field that question. We actually had ACATS in on the platform several years ago prior to bringing our own clearing system in-house. What we saw during that period was net incoming ACATS. More people were transferring ACATS in than transferring out to other brokerages. A large portion of that was, you know, customers enjoy the Robinhood product and find value in consolidating their stocks and various assets in one place. You know, we do think that that's something we hear from customers. All things being equal, they'd like to have the opportunity to consolidate. We do think that's gonna be largely customers that already have accounts.
We think existing customers consolidating more and more of their activity on Robinhood is a behavior that we believe is out there and we can help satisfy.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Steven Chubak of Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening.
Good evening.
Wanted to just touch on some of the new product launches, and one that admittedly didn't get much airplay on the call is fully paid securities lending. I was hoping you can give us an update on how that launch is progressing and whether you could frame or provide some context on how we should be thinking about that incremental revenue opportunity.
Yeah, thanks for the question. It's Jason. I'll go ahead and take that. You know, as you know, we have margin-based securities lending today. You know, really proud of the trading desk and you know the skill set that we have there around securities lending. On fully paid securities lending, a couple of things that I'd say. One reason we're really excited about that is it's an opportunity to enable customers to achieve more yield on their portfolios by participating in the program. This is another kind of example in the financial system where it's typically limited for folks with larger account balances. We're excited to bring this to more and more people.
Over the last year, there's been some structural changes on the regulatory front in terms of the requirements for the program, and we've been working closely, you know, with the teams and with the regulators to make sure that we, you know, build against those requirements and roll out a product that meets all of those. This is a program that actually requires a FINRA approval. You know, we're working with them. We've got a good productive and open dialogue with them, but we're excited to roll this out when we get the approval and we finish building.
Hard to predict the timing, particularly because of the approval, but I would say that the teams are getting really close to being ready to roll this out. We think it's a meaningful opportunity, not just for customers, but also for us, you know, and it has the potential to be kinda hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue for us. We'll have to stay tuned. Again, I think it's just great for customers, so we're eager to get this launched.
Helpful call, Jason. Thanks for taking my question.
Yeah, you bet.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Christian Bolu of Autonomous. Your line is open.
Good evening. Just back to crypto and to Vlad's point earlier on around being early on the product life cycle. Can you help us understand your monetization roadmap on crypto over the next 2 - 3 years? What is your ballpark take rate on crypto today relative to folks like Coinbase that are about 140 basis points? As you add more products, what are the, you know, wallets, more coins, staking, etc , how do you see that take rate trending over time?
Yeah. Thanks, Christian, for the question. This is Jason, I'll take it, and Vlad might have some additional color. You know, we're incredibly optimistic about crypto. We're hearing from customers that they want more coins. They want the ability to earn interest through either lending or staking. You know, as we commented earlier, we're being, you know, very mindful and diligent in this space. It's evolving from a regulatory perspective. There's been a number of questions raised about coins on other platforms being potentially unregistered securities.
We think it's the right thing, not just for shareholders and for the company, but also for customers to make sure that we, you know, apply the same kind of diligence to any new coins and new features, including lending, which has been suggested as a unregistered security, that we make sure that we do the right thing for everyone involved, all stakeholders involved before we roll something like that out. You're generally not gonna see us to be the first mover, particularly in this regulatory environment, until we get a bit more clarity. We do hear our customers, and they want more features.
We're gonna be working, you know, as fast as we can, with the right balance of safety and compliance, to make sure that we don't make missteps here. You know, this is something that we've learned over time, and we've built the competency in-house, to be diligent, and we're gonna take advantage of that. I do think that the safety-first focus that the company has is really a differentiator for us, and a competitive advantage. Super happy about that. In terms of the take rate, you know, we earn revenue on crypto through rebates on the market making, you know, similar to how it works in the brokerage space.
The amounts that we earn are a fraction of what customers are paying at other cryptocurrency marketplaces.
Okay. Thank you. For my follow-up, can you talk about how you think about acquisitions going forward? I mean, it's very clear that you potentially have significant ARPU opportunity if you indeed become the premier money app. You do have a rich currency despite what's happening in the aftermarket today. So can you talk about how you're thinking about maybe using M&A and acquisitions to really accelerate your strategic objectives?
Yeah, you bet. We've built a solid team in corp dev. You know, historically, we've done the majority of our growth, vast majority of our growth through organic. We continue to be kind of a build first mindset. That said, you know, I do think that it makes sense for us in the area of fintech to be paying close attention to how we might be able to accelerate our roadmap beyond organic growth. You know, I don't have anything to announce today, but we do have the competency in-house, and I think that we've built up the leadership team to be able to handle acquisitions going forward.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Brian Bedell of Deutsche Bank. Your question, please.
Great. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe just to try to get a little bit more color on the plan to launch retirement accounts. I know the timing is, you know, it's uncertain right now, but trying to get a sense if that's something that might be coming within the next year or it's a little bit longer than that. And then linking that with the ACATS in, is that something that you would plan on having that ability for customers to then ACAT in, say, a retirement account from another institution and that, and you know looking at that as a lever of organic growth?
Yeah, I'll be happy to field that. Certainly it is on next year's product roadmap, and we would be looking to leverage our ACATS in functionality across all accounts. You know, we're building things in a way that they can leverage common infrastructure, and they're interoperable. Certainly we'd be looking to allow ACATS in for all account types that we support, including IRAs.
ACATS in would be before the retirement accounts, I would assume.
Yes. Very likely so, yes.
Great.
ACATS in is sort of a nearer- term one, whereas retirement accounts, medium to long- term.
Yep. Okay. That's helpful. Just to follow up, just on the customer, the 24/7 customer support, any early statistics on usage of that customer support or, you know, maybe on wait times or, how people are using, which areas they're using it for in terms of crypto versus stocks and options?
We haven't provided any metrics here. What I'd tell you is that, you know, when we survey our customers after, you know, using the phone support, the satisfaction rates are significantly higher than other methods of contacting us. You know, we've been very pleased to set aggressive internal SLAs, and we're doing very well against those SLAs. You know, as you know, with over 22 million funded accounts, it's not just, you know, a manpower or, you know, a people power kind of challenge. It's also a technology challenge. You know, together with phone support, it's, you know, providing workflows within the product itself to help customers answer their own questions.
It's you know proactively finding reasons why customers need to contact us you know in the first place and rolling out improvements to the product. You know, I think the combination of all of these things are adding to you know just improved sentiment about the product experience.
Great. Thank you very much.
With that, I think that we are roughly at time. I just wanna quickly thank everyone for joining the call and your continued interest, and we look forward to talking to you guys again next quarter.
Yep. Thank you for all the questions, and thank you to the Robinhood team for all the hard work they're putting in to build products and keep our service reliable for customers.
Yeah. Thank you.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.