Robinhood, a leading retail brokerage known for its commission-free trading platform, has reignited a long-standing debate within the Ethereum community following the launch of its Arbitrum-based Ethereum layer-2 network, Robinhood Chain. The chain, which went live on July 1, has rapidly become one of the most active Ethereum rollups, attracting significant user activity and funds in its first two weeks.
Robinhood Chain’s rapid growth and user adoption
Over $141 million in Ether was bridged to Robinhood Chain within the initial fourteen days of operation. According to DeFiLlama, more than 500,000 wallets now hold ETH on the network, driven largely by increased decentralized exchange trading and a surge in memecoin interest. The trading volume on Robinhood Chain has surpassed that of the Ethereum mainnet and Base, Coinbase’s own layer-2, during peak activity periods.
Ether responded strongly to these developments, climbing roughly 15% from $1,582 on July 1 to $1,825 by July 13, based on figures from Coingecko. This price movement coincided with widespread positive commentary from industry figures, including Eric Trump of World Liberty Financial and Tom Lee, chairman of BitMine Immersion Technologies. Lee underscored the chain’s use of ETH as its native gas asset, positioning ETH as the backbone currency for both the rollup and Ethereum mainnet finality.
“It shows Ethereum L2s have gone from something crypto-native teams experiment with to infrastructure a regulated, publicly listed company will run its business on,” noted Alex Gluchowski, founder and CEO of Matter Labs.
Unlike previous rollups introduced by crypto-native projects, Robinhood Chain stands out due to its development by a major public brokerage with tens of millions of retail users. The network supports tokenized stocks and real-world assets, and data from Token Terminal indicated that within days of launch, it accounted for 6.9% of all tokenized stockholders.
Robinhood’s entry could encourage other traditional financial institutions, such as banks and asset managers, to consider building their own Ethereum L2s. Deutsche Bank is already developing DAMA 2, a zero-knowledge-powered Ethereum layer-2 focused on institutional finance.
Mini dictionary: Zero-knowledge (ZK) rollup – A type of Ethereum layer-2 scaling solution that uses cryptographic proofs to bundle and validate large numbers of transactions off-chain, improving speed and reducing cost while preserving security.
Impact on Ethereum’s value proposition
Industry analysts have debated whether successful layer-2 launches, such as Robinhood Chain, actually increase underlying demand for ETH. Historically, networks like Arbitrum, Optimism and Base have driven new users and activity but have not delivered sustained price gains for Ether, as economic activity largely remains within those rollups.
Robinhood’s approach, leveraging its sizable mainstream user base, is seen by some as potentially transformative for Ethereum’s institutional positioning. Max Shannon, senior research analyst at Bitwise, suggested that Robinhood’s launch reinforces Ethereum’s leadership for institutional adoption, and believes ETH could emerge as the reserve asset in a layer-2-dominated landscape.
Shannon noted that ETH’s tokenomics may need revision so that increased adoption and activity more clearly boost the asset’s value, observing, “it also arrives at a time when Ethereum has more broadly repositioned itself toward institutions through Eth Labs and Ethereum Institutional.”
Despite Robinhood Chain generating higher gas fees than other rollups recently, most of the economic benefit has accrued to the network itself. Data highlighted by analysts such as Lorenzo Valente at Ark Invest showed that since launch, Robinhood Chain produced $816,000 in revenue, with only $4,400 distributed to the Ethereum mainnet as gas fees.
| Layer-2 Network | Revenue since launch | ETH mainnet share |
|---|---|---|
| Robinhood Chain | $816,000 | $4,400 (approx. 0.54%) |
| Other L2s (avg) | Varies | Similar or less |
Alex Gluchowski commented that the true catalyst for ETH’s price appreciation may not be revenue from fees, but broader usage as a base monetary asset within layer-2 ecosystems. He emphasized that increased settlement of value on Ethereum could enhance ETH’s position, even if users interact primarily with stablecoins.
Skepticism remains among some investors and analysts, who point out that while the launch has increased optimism, it has not resolved how higher L2 activity ultimately drives ETH demand. Mike Dudas of 6th Man Ventures considered the Robinhood Chain launch highly positive but cautioned that Ether’s future depends largely on acceptance of ETH as “money” or a substantial increase in layer-1 settlement costs.
Institutional adoption and future challenges
Recent Ethereum upgrades have improved scaling, but stronger network activity has yet to translate into significantly higher fees or ETH burn. Shannon argued that neither Robinhood Chain nor the collective growth of L2s will solve this disconnect unless Ethereum’s token economics are fundamentally revised.
Another unresolved issue is whether institutional users will actually hold larger volumes of ETH, since many tokenized assets trade primarily against stablecoins. This could limit direct exposure to ETH, despite its importance as the foundational asset of the network. Robinhood’s rapid adoption signals a willingness among major financial institutions to build on Ethereum, but the long-term impact on ETH’s demand remains an open question.




