Key Highlights
- The board authorized a $1.5B share repurchase initiative, expanding the existing program with an additional $1.1B in buyback capacity
- The three-year repurchase timeline begins in Q1 2026
- Shares dropped 4.7% on Tuesday, closing at $69.08—the year’s lowest closing price
- The brokerage subsidiary increased its JPMorgan revolving credit agreement from $2.65B to $3.25B
- Year-to-date decline stands at approximately 39%, with shares falling 54.7% from October’s peak of $152.46
Trading platform Robinhood (HOOD) announced authorization of a $1.5 billion share repurchase initiative on the same day its stock reached the lowest closing price of the year.
According to an 8-K filing submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the board granted approval for the repurchase program on Tuesday, March 24. This authorization increases buyback capacity by more than $1.1 billion beyond what remained available under the previous plan.
The repurchase program spans approximately three years, commencing in the first quarter of 2026. The company maintains flexibility regarding the specific purchase amounts.
CFO Shiv Verma of Robinhood described the organization as “a generational company with a massive long-term opportunity.” He emphasized that the authorization demonstrates the board’s confidence in the company’s capacity to “continue delivering innovative products for customers and creating value for shareholders.”
Tuesday’s session ended with HOOD at $69.08, representing a 4.7% decline. This marked the stock’s lowest closing level recorded in 2026. After-hours activity showed a modest recovery to $70.90.
Significant Drop from October Peak
The stock has experienced a year-to-date decline approaching 39%, falling 54.7% from its October all-time peak of $152.46. Macroeconomic headwinds and geopolitical uncertainties have created challenges for technology and cryptocurrency-exposed equities.
Looking at a longer timeframe, HOOD maintains gains of approximately 43% over the trailing 12 months, supported by the company’s diversification into prediction markets, banking services, and cryptocurrency trading capabilities.
According to analyst sentiment aggregator TipRanks, the average 12-month price target for HOOD stands at $123.85. Based on assessments from 16 Wall Street analysts, the consensus rating reaches “strong buy.”
Share repurchase programs generally indicate management’s view that current stock valuations are below intrinsic value—though Tuesday’s market reaction remained muted.
Revolving Credit Agreement Expansion
Concurrent with the buyback announcement, Robinhood Securities—the company’s brokerage arm—finalized an amended revolving credit agreement with JPMorgan Chase serving as lead arranger.
The credit facility received an expansion to $3.25 billion from its previous $2.65 billion level. An accordion feature allows potential increases to total commitments reaching $4.875 billion, providing additional financial flexibility.
Meanwhile, Robinhood advances its cryptocurrency and tokenization strategy. The platform released its Ethereum layer-2 network, Robinhood Chain, to public testnet status in February.
CEO Vlad Tenev reported the network handled 4 million transactions during its inaugural testnet week. The infrastructure aims to support tokenized equities, ETFs, and additional traditional financial products.
Mainnet deployment is scheduled for later in 2026.
Trading concluded Tuesday with HOOD at $69.08, while after-hours activity reflected a slight uptick to $70.90.

