Your AI agent can now trade stocks on Robinhood. From its own account, using a pre-funded wallet.
The company rolled out AI agent trading in beta on Wednesday, along with a virtual credit card built for bots.
How It Actually Works
Robinhood's setup keeps the AI on a leash. Users create a separate account for their agent and link it to a dedicated wallet with a pre-loaded balance.
The agent can read the full portfolio, suggest trades, and place orders - but only with the money sitting in that wallet.
Think of it like handing your AI a debit card with a hard cap. It can shop, but only with what you put in the envelope.
Every trade triggers a notification, and some require the user to approve a preview before the order goes through.
Robinhood also built in a fraud detection team that reviews suspicious activity and helps users dispute trades that shouldn't have happened.
The whole system plugs into something called Model Context Protocol, or MCP - a standard way for AI agents to connect with outside services. Through it, agents can check concentration risk, pull sector exposure, read analyst notes, and place orders.
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A Credit Card For Bots
The other half of the launch is a virtual credit card built for AI agents. Users connect their agent to Robinhood's banking MCP, and the agent can make payments through the card.
Only Gold Card holders can link to it right now, with Platinum Card holders getting the same feature when it launches later this year.
Users set monthly spending limits, and they can choose whether the agent must ask permission for every payment.
Why Robinhood Is Moving First
Robinhood isn't alone in building rails for AI to spend money. Stripe, Amazon, and Google have all rolled out tools that let AI agents buy things on a user's behalf, with smaller startups like Prava Pay doing the same.
But Robinhood is among the first major brokerages to let agents trade. That's the bet - get there before Schwab and Fidelity figure out a policy, and own the AI tools millions of investors are about to start using.
The company has been building toward this for a while, buying AI research platform Pluto in 2024 and adding an AI investing assistant last year.
"We've heard a lot of demand from our customers to bring their own tools, LLMs, and agents, and connect them to Robinhood," Robinhood VP of product Abhishek Fatehpuria told TechCrunch.
What To Watch
Stocks are the only thing agents can trade today, with options, crypto, event contracts, futures, and prediction markets coming next.
Letting an AI buy 10 shares of Apple is one thing - letting it place leveraged options trades is another entirely.
The real test isn't the tech. It's whether anyone trusts their AI enough to fund the wallet.
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