
Robinhood’s February data show crypto notional volumes up 9% to $25b while equity, options and event contracts shrink, proving speculative energy has rotated back into coins.
Summary
- Crypto notional trading hit $25.0b in February, up 9% month‑on‑month and 74% year‑on‑year, with $9.4b on the app and $15.6b routed through Bitstamp.
- Equity notional volume fell to $194.4b, down 14% from January, while options contracts slipped 10% to 180.3m, underscoring cooling risk appetite outside coins.
- Event contracts plunged 29% versus January, signalling that speculative flow is rotating away from Robinhood’s prediction markets and back into volatile crypto names.
Robinhood’s February numbers are clear: crypto is where the life is, everything else is fading.
Robinhood crypto volume jumps in February
Robinhood reported February crypto notional trading volumes of $25.0 billion, up 9% month‑on‑month and 74% year‑on‑year. Of that, $9.4 billion ran through the Robinhood app itself, with the remaining volume routed via Bitstamp, which Robinhood acquired in 2025 and now uses as its institutional and deep‑liquidity back‑end. This follows January’s $22.9 billion in crypto volume, meaning Robinhood has printed back‑to‑back months of sequential growth in digital‑asset activity to start 2026.
The crypto growth comes as Bitcoin trades near all‑time highs and volatility returns across majors and meme‑adjacent tokens, pulling in both retail flow on the app and larger tickets via Bitstamp. For Robinhood, that mix is ideal: more notional, fatter spreads and higher engagement in a product line that was supposed to be dead post‑2021 but is now the only one actually inflecting up.
Equities, options and event contracts slump
Everything outside crypto is going the other way. Equity notional trading volume in February came in at $194.4 billion, down 14% from January, even though that still marks a 36% increase versus a year earlier. Options contracts traded fell to 180.3 million, a 10% month‑on‑month decline and only a 9% gain year‑on‑year, with average daily option volume at 9.5 million contracts, down 5% versus January.
The sharpest hit is in Robinhood’s event contracts — its prediction‑market‑style product. February saw just 2.4 billion event contracts traded, a 29% drop from January’s level, giving back a chunk of the growth the firm had touted as part of its post‑meme diversification story. That tells you where speculative energy has rotated: away from binary macro bets and back into leveraged plays on BTC and friends.
What this rotation really means
From a market‑structure perspective, Robinhood is simply reflecting the broader tape: crypto volatility plus upside trends are attracting flows at the margin, while single‑stock and options trading cools off after a heavy run. For crypto markets, more retail flow through Robinhood and Bitstamp means more noise, more forced buying and selling around headlines, and fatter tails on both sides when the Fed or macro shocks hit.









