Humble beginnings
Robinhood’s founders, Vladimir Tenev and Baiju Bhatt, met in Stanford University in 2005, where they both studied physics and mathematics. “We were both nerds, but cooler ones with a Mick Jagger kind of a look. We instantly became good friends,” smiles Bhatt. They started out their careers in New York, building trading platforms for financial institutions on Wall Street. “We were building technology for large financial institutions so we understood how the financial system worked and the nuts and bolts of how a technology-driven brokerage operates. We realised that post 2008, brokerages have become much more optimised and the cost of transaction has gone down to zero as a by-product of computerised trading. This had created an industry which allowed people to trade million times in a day for small profit margins,” says Bhatt, co-founder, Robinhood. “We saw that institutional investors were paying next to nothing while retail investors typically pay $10 per transaction.” He says that Robinhood was inspired by the Occupy Wall Street Movement, a movement that saw people protesting against social and economic inequality. “We could see that people were disillusioned with the financial system in the US. They wanted more transparency. So, we knew that if we could make stock market investing-free, easy to use and a delightful experience for the customer, we would unlock a market that doesn’t exist, which is young people investing in the stock market,” says Baiju. The duo decided to move back to California to take the technology that only few had an access to and give it to everyone. So, they set about building a product that made investing easy, was mobile-first and free. “The mobile-first design focused on zero commission strategy to grab these users and this has been an amazing strategy. The growth has been viral thus far. Robinhood will continue to grow among the millennial audience as we have just scratched the surface. Tenev and Bhatt want to build the next great financial institution and they created Robinhood, focusing on transparency,” says Scott Sandell, managing general partner, New Enterprise Associates.