Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) is having a rough Monday, and really a rough month. The trading platform's shares dropped 10.73% to close at $115.97, continuing a slide that's taken the stock down more than 10% over the past month. Not exactly the momentum you want after posting a solid earnings beat.
The Earnings Were Good, So What's the Problem?
Here's the strange part: on November 5, Robinhood actually delivered impressive numbers. The company reported earnings per share of 61 cents, handily beating the consensus estimate of 48 cents. Revenue came in at $1.27 billion, also ahead of the $1.19 billion analysts expected. In most universes, this would spark a rally. In this one, not so much.
Analysts Still Bullish Despite the Slide
Following the earnings report, several Wall Street analysts actually raised their price targets on the stock. Mizuho analyst Dan Dolev maintained an Outperform rating and bumped his target from $145 to $172. Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Brett Knoblauch kept an Overweight rating and raised his target from $130 to $155. Barclays analyst Benjamin Budish went from $162 to $168, maintaining an Overweight rating. Even Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Kyle Voigt, who holds a more cautious Market Perform rating, raised his target from $121 to $135.
The consensus price target sits at $123.35, with estimates ranging wildly from $47 on the low end to $180 on the high end. That's quite the spread.
What the Charts Are Saying
From a technical perspective, Robinhood is in an interesting spot. The stock trades within its 52-week range of $29.66 to $153.85, but it's currently sitting about 14.3% below its 50-day moving average of $132.80. That signals a short-term bearish trend, though the bigger picture remains impressive—the stock is still up 188.7% year-to-date.
The RSI reading of 42.00 suggests the stock is approaching oversold territory, which could signal a bounce if buyers step back in. The key support level to watch is $112.42, which is uncomfortably close to where the stock closed Monday. If that support breaks, traders will be eyeing the 200-day moving average at $85.93, though that's significantly below current levels.
On the upside, Robinhood faces resistance at $123.44, just above Monday's close. The psychological barrier at $125 adds another layer of difficulty for any rally attempt. The stock is caught in a tight range between support and resistance, which typically means increased volatility as traders react to every wiggle.
How Robinhood Stacks Up
With a market capitalization of $110.15 billion, Robinhood sits between competitors like Coinbase ($76.58 billion) and Charles Schwab ($167.73 billion). This mid-tier positioning could influence how investors view the stock as market conditions shift.
The current setup makes that $112.42 support level absolutely critical. A decisive break below could trigger accelerated selling, while a bounce could set up a move back toward that $123.44 resistance. For now, traders are watching and waiting to see which way this thing breaks.