Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) CEO Vlad Tenev isn't letting Wall Street's biggest players have all the fun when it comes to the Trump administration's new children's savings program. On Thursday, he confirmed he spoke directly with President Donald Trump, promising that Robinhood would dedicate whatever technology, operational resources, and talent necessary to make "Trump Accounts as robust and intuitive as possible."
Robinhood Makes Its Pitch
Tenev shared video of his CNBC appearance on X, emphasizing that "Robinhood has given the President and Treasury our assurances that we can dedicate the technology and capital to making Trump Accounts as robust and intuitive as possible."
His pitch centers on something bigger than just managing accounts. In the video, Tenev framed the program as essential for getting young Americans invested in the system early: "I think this is super important, particularly now, because getting people from a young age to buy into our free market system and be owners of America. I think that could solve a lot of the problem."
The Trump Accounts program, officially announced earlier this week, provides $1,000 in government seed money to eligible children born between 2025 and 2028. Parents can contribute up to $5,000 annually on top of that initial stake, creating what amounts to a stock-linked savings vehicle that remains untouchable until the child turns 18.
The Competition Is Fierce
Robinhood isn't the only firm interested in this opportunity. Major financial institutions are lining up to compete for the role of managing these accounts. According to the Wall Street Journal, early contenders include JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Charles Schwab (SCHW), Robinhood, and asset management giant BlackRock (BLK).
These firms are competing to become the Treasury Department's "designated financial agent" for the program, and it's not hard to see why. The accounts could generate millions of long-term client relationships once these children reach adulthood and gain access to their funds.
The initiative already has significant early momentum thanks to Dell Technologies, Inc. (DELL) founder Michael Dell and his wife Susan Dell, who donated $6.25 billion to seed 25 million accounts with $250 each. That's a substantial foundation for a program that's just getting off the ground.
Not Everyone Is Sold
The proposal has attracted skepticism alongside the enthusiasm. Critics question whether creating a stock-linked savings vehicle that parents can contribute to but not access until their child turns 18 represents the most effective approach to supporting families.
Still, interest appears strong among parents. A reader poll indicates that many would likely invest the initial $1,000 in mutual funds, ETFs, or individual stocks. Popular investment choices include high-growth Magnificent Seven names like Nvidia Corp (NVDA), Apple Inc. (AAPL), and Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (GOOGL).
The long-term restrictions built into the program mean families are essentially locked into whatever investment decisions they make for up to 18 years. That's a long time horizon in markets that can be volatile, though it also means these accounts could benefit from compound growth over nearly two decades.
For Robinhood, landing this contract would represent validation of its platform's maturity and capabilities. The company that democratized stock trading for a generation of young investors now wants to be the one introducing the next generation to investing before they can even read. Whether that pitch wins over the Treasury Department remains to be seen, but Tenev is clearly betting that Robinhood's user-friendly approach gives it an edge over traditional Wall Street firms.