Robinhood’s startup fund stumbles in NYSE debut
Retail investors are famously locked out of the startup world.
” To do this, the company that pioneered the commission-free brokerage model has secured access to eight startups—including Databricks, Stripe, Mercor, and Oura—grouping them into a vehicle called Robinhood Ventures Fund I.
On Thursday, Robinhood announced the fund had raised $658.
4 million — which could reach $705. 7 million if underwriters exercise their full allotment.
RVI’s reception on Wall Street stands in stark contrast to another attempt to give individual investors exposure to buzzy startups.
84 to an opening trade of $8. 25, eventually closing its first day at $9.
Destiny Tech100 has kept climbing since its public debut.
The fund closed trading on Friday at $26.
61, a 33% premium to its net asset value of $19. 97, meaning its shares trade well above the actual value of its underlying holdings. So what explains why retail investors aren’t nearly as excited about Robinhood’s fund as they are about Destiny Tech 100?
Robinhood is looking to address this.
But securing access to these high-profile companies is far from straightforward.
Robinhood is aiming to get directly onto their cap tables directly through primary capital raises or secondary share sales — and that’s difficult even for a firm with deep roots in Silicon Valley.
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