Robinhood Prepares Second Venture Fund to Democratize Startup Investing
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Robinhood Ventures Expands with RVII, Targeting Early-Stage Startups
Robinhood, the disruptive financial services company best known for its commission-free trading platform, is doubling down on its mission to democratize investing—this time by giving retail investors access to high-growth startups. Just two months after listing its first venture fund on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the company has filed confidential paperwork for a second fund, RVII, signaling an aggressive expansion into early-stage venture capital.
The move comes as Robinhood’s inaugural venture fund, RVI, has seen its stock price more than double since its March debut—a strong performance that underscores investor enthusiasm for exposure to private tech companies. While RVI focused on late-stage startups like OpenAI, Stripe, and Databricks, RVII will broaden its scope to include younger, riskier—but potentially more lucrative—early-stage ventures.
Breaking Down Barriers in Venture Capital
Traditionally, investing in startups has been the domain of wealthy individuals and institutional players. U.S. securities laws restrict private market investments to “accredited investors”—those with a net worth exceeding $1 million or annual income above $200,000. This has left everyday investors locked out of the most explosive growth phases of companies like OpenAI, which saw its valuation skyrocket in private markets before going public.
Robinhood’s venture funds aim to change that. By packaging stakes in high-profile startups into publicly traded vehicles, the company allows ordinary investors to buy shares through a standard brokerage account—no accreditation required.
“You can think of [Robinhood Ventures] as a publicly traded venture capital firm with daily liquidity,” CEO Vlad Tenev said at The Wall Street Journal’s Future of Everything conference. Unlike traditional venture funds, where capital is locked up for years, Robinhood’s structure enables investors to buy and sell shares at any time. Additionally, the firm doesn’t take a cut of profits—a departure from conventional VC models.
A Rocky Start, but Strong Performance
Robinhood’s first fund, RVI, launched with ambitious goals but faced early hurdles. The company initially sought to raise $1 billion but fell short by several hundred million. Despite this, the fund has been a market success. After debuting at $21 per share in March, RVI’s stock surged to $43.69 by early May—a 108% gain in just two months.
Analysts attribute the rally to investor excitement over the fund’s AI-heavy portfolio, which includes stakes in OpenAI and ElevenLabs—two companies at the forefront of the generative AI boom.
Now, with RVII, Robinhood is pivoting toward earlier-stage startups, a segment that offers higher risk but also the potential for outsized returns. The exact fundraising target for RVII remains undisclosed, but the company’s confidence appears unshaken.
The Bigger Vision: Retail Investors in Seed Rounds
Tenev’s ambitions extend beyond just venture funds. He envisions a future where retail investors participate directly in seed and Series A funding rounds—traditionally the exclusive playground of venture capitalists and angel investors.
“The aspiration is, if you’re a company raising a seed round and a Series A round—so, just first capital—retail should be a big chunk of that round, much like it now is in the public markets,” Tenev said. “We should let those people in at the ground floor, so they can actually benefit from this potential appreciation that’s increasingly happening in the private markets.”
If successful, this model could upend venture capital as we know it, redistributing access to wealth creation that has long been concentrated among Silicon Valley insiders and ultra-high-net-worth individuals.
Challenges Ahead
Despite the optimism, Robinhood’s venture experiment is not without risks. Early-stage startups fail at much higher rates than late-stage ones, meaning RVII’s portfolio could see significant volatility. Additionally, regulatory scrutiny remains a wild card—authorities may question whether retail investors fully grasp the risks of private market exposure.
Moreover, Robinhood must prove it can consistently pick winners. While RVI’s early performance is encouraging, venture capital is a long game, and many high-profile startups eventually flame out.
A New Era for Retail Investing?
Robinhood’s latest move underscores a broader trend: the blurring of lines between public and private markets. With RVII, the company is betting that retail investors want—and deserve—a seat at the startup table.
Whether this experiment succeeds could reshape not just Robinhood’s future, but the entire venture capital landscape. For now, one thing is clear: the era of democratized startup investing is here—and it’s moving fast.
As Robinhood pushes forward with RVII, the financial world will be watching closely to see if this bold experiment pays off—for the company and for everyday investors alike.
