Robinhood's Plan to Win the Crypto Exchange War? Kill Trading Fees

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CEO of Robinhood Markets, Vlad Tenev, explains why he thinks fee-based cryptocurrency trading will soon become a relic of the past.

As a new entrant into the cryptocurrency field, Vlad Tenev, co-CEO of online investment brokerage Robinhood, is following a time-honored business strategy:Â Undercut the competition.

Except he's taking it to an extreme.

Launched early this year, Robinhood Crypto is differentiating itself with zero-fee transactions, with the ultimate goal of doing away with the concept of trading fees in the market altogether.

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Framing this effort as a force for good in line with his company's namesake folk hero, Tenev told CoinDesk he wanted to prevent consumers looking to invest in cryptocurrencies, especially young millennials, from getting "ripped off with 4 to 5 percent transaction fees" on "sketchy foreign exchanges."

And while offering zero-cost trades to consumers may give Robinhood an edge right now, in his mind, it's only a matter of time before this becomes commonplace.

"Some people just are comfortable with the old ways but that's becoming less and less over time. I think with transaction fee-based trading you'll have the same story," he said, adding:

"Over the next couple of years, the vast majority of people that are interested in these services will begin to understand that you're not getting much from paying those fees."

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The fee-free business model has already served Robinhood well in its flagship business, Robinhood Financial. Founded in 2013, the company originally dealt in traditional investment products such as stocks and options, competing with discount brokerages like E-Trade and Charles Schwab.

From the outset, and continuing to this day, Robinhood offered these services on a no-commission basis.

Instead, the company primarily makes its profits through collecting interest on cash and securities held in customers' accounts, as well as through optional premium account memberships such as Robinhood Gold. It currently services over 5 million consumers and has contributed mightily to a pricing war among brokerages that has reportedly driven incumbents' fees down nearly 40 percent.

In crypto, however, it's unclear how Robinhood intends to make money over the long term.

For now, the company is treating this activity as a way to get consumers to open accounts that will hopefully benefit its core business. "The primary goal of the crypto business is to just get people into the overall ecosystem so we're intending to break even on that business for the foreseeable future," Tenev said at a recent conference in New York.