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- Gen Z loves old-school finance while older investors want the new, Robinhood’s CEO says.
- Younger investors are opening retirement accounts, CEO Vlad Tenev says.
- Robinhood aims to serve both Gen Z savers and older investors drawn to innovation, he says.
When Robinhood launched its app in 2015 with a commission-free trading platform, it positioned itself as the anti-Wall Street offering for a generation skeptical of big banks and old-school brokers.
But in a recent interview on Jack Altman’s “Uncapped” podcast, CEO Vlad Tenev said a surprising cultural reversal is now underway: Gen Z is embracing financial traditions their parents ignored, while older investors are chasing the new and shiny.
“Now I think Gen Z and Gen Alpha, there’s almost this opposite thing happening where the old big storied incumbents are kind of cool again,” Tenev said. “There’s a broader trend of things that are old and kind of, you know, maybe that your grandparents would use, being cool again.”
He pointed to the resurgence of older technologies as examples of that shift.
“Gen Zs are really into buying vinyl, and cassette tapes are selling again,” he said. “My daughter asked me if she could have a Walkman.”
That same nostalgia, Tenev added, is showing up in Gen Z’s personal finance.
“I think the same way, financially, people are like — the younger generation is interested in retirement,” he said. “Now Gen Zs are opening retirement accounts at 19 years old.”
Generations swap playbooks
For Tenev, that early financial seriousness reflects a new mindset. Gen Z wants control, stability, and legitimacy — values that once made Vanguard and Fidelity household names.
The irony, he said, is that older investors now crave what Robinhood offers: a sense of innovation and ease.
“You would think with older customers, we would emphasize how stable and how long we’ve been around and all these things, but actually that resonates very strongly with young people — and older people want to be that you can be plugged into the cool new thing. It’s innovative, easy to use, we have all these features.”
That generational flip is forcing Robinhood to rethink how it presents itself.
The company built its brand on disruption — free trades, crypto, meme stocks — but it’s now trying to appeal across age groups without getting “stuck in a generation,” as Tenev put it.
“E-Trade was very popular with Gen X — it became a Gen X broker,” he said. “Schwab’s average customer is in their 60s or 70s now, so it’s very much the broker of the boomer generation.”
Robinhood, he added, is trying to break that pattern.
“What we try very hard to do is always pay attention to the next generation while also moving up market in the sense of being able to serve older customers.”
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