SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA – Vlad Tenev, co-founder and CEO of Robinhood, made an appearance at the 12th Breakthrough Prize Ceremony at Barker Hangar, showcasing a year of significant developments for the financial technology company. Just two months after the launch of its first venture fund, Robinhood is now gearing up to introduce a second fund under the name RVII. This move comes with a confidential registration filed with regulatory authorities, a procedural step that enables the company to navigate the necessary approvals before public disclosure of specific details related to the new fund.
The upcoming RVII is poised to differ significantly from its predecessor. While Robinhood’s initial venture fund currently invests in 10 late-stage companies—such as Airwallex, Databricks, and OpenAI—this second fund will target a broader spectrum by including early-stage and growth-stage startups. This strategic shift reflects a willingness to embrace the inherent risks associated with younger companies, as they also present the potential for outsized returns.
As Robinhood prepares for RVII, the fundraising target remains unspecified. For its inaugural fund, Robinhood aimed to raise a hefty $1 billion but ultimately achieved a total closer to $700 million. Despite falling short of its original goal, the first fund has demonstrated robust performance since its entrance to the market. The ticker for this fund, RVI, debuted at $21 per share in early March and has since more than doubled, closing recently at $43.69, driven largely by investor excitement surrounding the AI capabilities of its underlying assets.
A key element of Robinhood’s venture funds is their aim to democratize startup investment opportunities, challenging longstanding barriers set by federal regulations that typically confine investment in private companies to “accredited” investors. By allowing ordinary investors to participate through a public brokerage account, Robinhood is attempting to bridge the gap that has historically kept retail investors from benefitting from the early stages of company growth.
Tenev described Robinhood Ventures as akin to a publicly traded venture capital firm, emphasizing its daily liquidity—a feature that enables shares to be bought or sold on any trading day, in contrast to the lengthy capital locking periods of traditional venture capital firms. Furthermore, he noted that Robinhood does not impose a carry, meaning it refrains from claiming a percentage of profits, a standard practice among conventional venture firms.
As the demand for early investment in AI-driven companies surges, Tenev envisions a future where retail investors play a pivotal role in raising initial capital rounds. His ambition is that retail participation in seed and Series A rounds could mirror the current dynamics in public markets, allowing individual investors to share in the financial rewards and risks associated with startup growth. Should this vision materialize, it could profoundly reshape the landscape of startup funding, potentially allowing retail investors to partner with venture firms right from the earliest stages of investment.


