Fintech industry participants weighed in on Robinhood’s (NASDAQ: HOOD) use of artificial intelligence (AI) agents this past week.
“There’s a huge opportunity for Robinhood to reshape trading behavior again through AI agents. As these systems become more deeply embedded in investing platforms, users will increasingly stop viewing trading as something they do entirely on their own. Instead, investing will become a collaborative process between humans and AI, with agents helping evaluate opportunities, manage risk, and allocate capital more efficiently.
“However, the major challenge is trust. While AI agents are becoming more capable, most users still have limited confidence in allowing autonomous systems to manage meaningful financial assets. If AI agents are going to handle capital at scale, they need to operate within the same trust frameworks that underpin construction contracts, insurance markets, and capital markets today: escrow, underwriting, and collateralization. Without those safeguards, adoption will always lag behind the technology’s potential.”
– Chandler Fang, founder of t54
“Robinhood’s embrace of AI agents feels like an important milestone for consumer finance, and a strong signal that autonomous financial coordination is moving into the mainstream. At Kuvi.ai, we recognized early on that intelligent agents could evolve far beyond chatbots, becoming active participants in economic activity by helping users manage assets, make decisions, and interact with markets in real time. Long before Agentic Finance became a widely discussed concept, we were already exploring how AI agents could transform financial workflows and searching for the language to describe a world beyond apps, dashboards, and manual execution.
“To our knowledge, we were among the first teams publicly using the term ‘agentic finance’, and it’s exciting to see the category gaining momentum. We’re also proud to have contributed to some of the early conversations that helped shape what is now the upcoming Agentic Finance Summit in NYC. The most encouraging part is that the idea has grown beyond any single company. That’s usually the sign that a genuine new category is emerging.”
– Dylan Dewdney, co-founder and CEO of Kuvi.ai
“Robinhood letting AI agents trade for users is a big step toward a future where software doesn’t just execute trades, but actively allocates capital on behalf of individuals. One interesting direction moving forward could be automated allocations across crowdfunding campaigns, startups, and investment opportunities based on a user’s goals and risk preferences.
“In that world, AI agents could continuously evaluate opportunities and deploy funds in real time. Decentralized payments and stablecoins make that much easier, giving agents programmable money they can move instantly, transparently, and globally without relying on traditional financial intermediaries.”
– Joshua Kim, CEO and founder of DonaFi