Key Points
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Shiv Verma sold 3,982 shares for an estimated ~$457,000 on July 15, 2026.
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The disposal reduced the officer’s direct equity position by 7%.
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Holdings are maintained entirely through direct ownership, with no indirect entities reported.
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The transaction was executed under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan originally adopted in August 2025.
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Shiv Verma, Chief Financial Officer of Robinhood Markets, Inc. (NASDAQ:HOOD), reported a sale of 3,982 shares of Class A Common Stock on July 15, 2026, according to a recent SEC Form 4 filing.
Transaction summary
MetricValueTransaction value~$457,000Shares sold (directly held)3,982Post-transaction shares (directly held)55,945Post-transaction value$6.5 million
Transaction value based on SEC Form 4 weighted average sale price ($114.71); post-transaction value based on July 15, 2026, market close ($115.54).
Key questions
- Is this transaction part of a systematic trading program?Shiv Verma executed this sale under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on Aug. 20, 2025. This arrangement allows corporate insiders to schedule stock transactions in advance to help avoid potential conflicts regarding material non-public information.
- What is the insider’s remaining exposure to the firm?Following this disposal, the officer maintains a direct equity position of 55,945 shares. This stake represents 0.0062% of Robinhood Markets, based on current shares outstanding.
- How has the stock performed leading up to this disposal?The transaction occurred as the stock had appreciated by 16% over the 12-month period ending on July 15, 2026 transaction date.
- What is the current market and financial context?As of July 16, 2026, market close, the stock was priced at $106.02, giving the company a market capitalization of $90.0 billion. This follows a period where Robinhood Markets generated $4.6 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue and $1.9 billion in net income.
Company Overview
MetricValueShare Price (as of market close 2026-07-16)$106.02Market Capitalization$90.0 billionRevenue (TTM)$4.6 billionNet Income (TTM)$1.9 billion
Company Snapshot
- Robinhood Markets operates a comprehensive financial services platform that enables retail investors to trade equities, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), options contracts, precious metals, and cryptocurrencies, generating revenue primarily through transaction-based fees, premium subscription services, and net interest income on customer cash balances.
- The company’s business model centers on democratizing investment access through a commission-free trading platform while monetizing user engagement through margin lending, premium subscription tiers, and financial data services.
- Robinhood primarily serves retail investors and individual traders across the United States, focusing on younger, digitally native demographics seeking accessible, low-cost investment opportunities.
Robinhood Markets operates as a leading retail-focused financial services platform with a market capitalization of $90.0 billion and TTM revenue of $4.6 billion. The company has established a competitive advantage through its user-friendly, mobile-first interface, commission-free trading model, and comprehensive asset-class offerings that appeal to a broad retail investor base. With 2,900 employees and headquarters in Menlo Park, Robinhood continues to expand its product suite and market penetration within the retail investment sector.
What this transaction means for investors
Due to the small size (relatively speaking) of Verma’s sale, this transaction shouldn’t have much of an impact on how an investor should perceive Robinhood’s stock. The sale is a single-digit percentage of their total holdings and is a pretty standard sale for the CFO to make over time.
What really matters is how Robinhood’s operations have been faring — and the simplest answer for that is great. In its last quarter, Robinhood saw:
- total platform assets rise 39%
- Robinhood Gold adoption rates develop from 12.4% to 15.8%
- revenue increase 15%
- adjusted EBITDA jump 14%
- average revenue per user grow 8%
Meanwhile, the company’s nascent banking operations grew fivefold, while its prediction markets reported a new quarterly record.
While I’m not in love with HOOD’s prediction markets business, it can’t be denied that the company has seemingly become the home investing base for younger generations — and is increasingly becoming the go-to destination for all things finance as Robinhood diversifies its broad platform of offerings.
Trading at 44 times forward earnings, Robinhood is far from cheap. However, I would only be interested in adding to my position in the stock today as it could be positioned for decades of growth alongside its young customer base.
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Josh Kohn-Lindquist has positions in Robinhood Markets. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.