Robinhood just made a bold move into AI-powered trading for the retail market

Traders will be able to connect their own third-party AI agents to the brokerage platform

Robinhood just made a bold move into AI-powered trading for the retail market

Robinhood is giving AI agents the keys to its trading platform in a move that pushes the retail brokerage further into autonomous finance territory and raises fresh questions about oversight and investor protection.

The company has announced the launch of Agentic Trading and the Agentic Credit Card, two products that allow customers to plug third-party AI agents directly into Robinhood accounts via the company's Model Context Protocol servers. The agents can then execute equity trades and make credit card purchases without requiring the customer to approve each individual transaction.

"Our mission has always been to democratize finance for all, and now, that mission extends to AI agents," said Vlad Tenev, CEO of Robinhood.

The trading component works through a dedicated account that sits apart from a customer's primary portfolio, meaning any agent only has access to funds specifically deposited there.

Robinhood said customers will receive push notifications each time an agent places a trade and can monitor a real-time activity feed and profit-and-loss statement through the app. The firm is launching the trading feature in beta with equities only, with options, crypto, futures, and event contracts slated to follow.

The credit card product works similarly. Customers link an agent to a dedicated virtual version of the Robinhood Gold Card, set a spending ceiling they control, and decide whether to require manual sign-off on purchases or let the agent spend autonomously.

Risks acknowledged

Robinhood's disclosures accompanying the announcement are pointed about the risks involved.

The company acknowledges that AI agents can misinterpret instructions, act on stale information, and behave unpredictably. It explicitly states it does not control, supervise, monitor, recommend, or audit the agents customers choose to connect, and that once customer data leaves Robinhood's environment and reaches a third-party AI provider, it falls under that provider's terms rather than Robinhood's. Customers, the disclosures state, assume all risk for orders placed by their agents.

To address those concerns, Robinhood said it has built in several safety mechanisms. Agents can be disconnected instantly with a single tap. The company's support team can review the instructions a customer gave an agent alongside what the agent actually did, which it says will help resolve disputes. Customers can also opt into manual approval for every credit card charge before it processes, and agents will offer trade previews where appropriate before submitting orders.

The product is designed to be agent-agnostic so that customers can use their own agents from any source and connect them through Robinhood's Trading and Banking MCP servers. Full documentation is available through the company's support site.

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