Prediction: 1 Soaring Cryptocurrency Stock Could Plunge by 50% (or More)

Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ: HOOD) stock has been on a tear lately, with a whopping 358% gain over the past 12 months alone. The company has benefited from heightened activity in the financial markets, with everything from stocks to cryptocurrencies reaching record highs over the last few months.

Robinhood is known for its ability to attract young, first-time investors to its brokerage platform, which is something most of its competitors have struggled with. However, its business is facing structural challenges that will be extremely difficult to overcome in the long run, so investors should be very cautious about the recent surge in its stock price.

In fact, I think Robinhood stock could plunge by at least 50% from its current price around $50 (as of this writing). Here's why.

Robinhood's core business is currently smaller than it was in 2021

Robinhood has two primary sources of revenue. First, there is transaction revenue, which it earns when clients buy and sell stocks or cryptocurrencies . Second, there is net interest revenue, which is the interest it earns on the cash it holds in bank accounts on behalf of clients (as well as its own cash).

Transaction revenue reflects the performance of Robinhood's core business. During the third quarter of 2024 (ended Sept. 30), the company's transaction revenue came in at $319 million, which was the lowest level of the entire year (pending its fourth-quarter result, which is due for release on Feb. 12).

The result was also still below its quarterly peak of $451 million from 2021. Simply put, despite all the enthusiasm in stock, crypto, and options markets last year, Robinhood's core business is still smaller than it was at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A significant decline in its user base is a key reason why. During Q3 2024, Robinhood had 11 million monthly active users, down by almost half from its peak of 21.3 million in mid-2021.

Since many of Robinhood's younger clients enjoy making speculative bets using risky financial instruments like options, they tend not to be very sticky. In other words, once they inevitably lose money, they leave the platform -- and it appears that many of them don't come back.

That brings me to a very important point. The recent rally in Robinhood stock seems to be driven by speculation that its upcoming Q4 results -- and its results going forward in 2025 -- could show a significant improvement because of the surge in trading activity after the U.S. presidential election on Nov. 5 .

The early signs are promising. Robinhood's monthly metrics report for November showed a whopping 780% year-over-year increase in crypto trading volume, and a 178% jump in stock trading volume. However, Robinhood's track record suggests this is more likely to be a temporary blip rather than sustainable growth.

OK