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How Retail Wealth in Crypto Is Being Rebuilt From Both Ends

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NEW YORK, NY, May 22, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ -- The average crypto holder's net worth took a brutal hit in the last downturn. The recovery hasn't come from price alone. It's come from better products.

Vlad Tenev understood this before most of his competitors. Robinhood's crypto expansion over the past two years has focused less on listing new tokens and more on building the financial tools that let retail users manage digital assets the way institutions do: with portfolio visibility, tax optimization, recurring investment features, and yield-generating products wrapped in a regulated interface.

The strategy is working. Robinhood's crypto revenue and user engagement have grown consistently through a period when many retail-focused platforms were shrinking or shutting down.

The Retail Problem

Retail investors bore the worst of the last crash. They were the most leveraged, the least hedged, and the most exposed to platforms that failed to segregate customer assets. The net worth destruction was real and concentrated among participants who could least afford it.

That experience created a trust deficit that the industry is still working to repair. Tenev has been candid about this in public appearances, arguing that the next generation of retail crypto products needs to prioritize financial outcomes over trading volume.

It's a meaningful departure from the gamification playbook that defined Robinhood's early years. The company's crypto product roadmap now emphasizes wealth building over transaction frequency, a shift that reflects both regulatory pressure and a genuine reassessment of what retail users actually need.

The Other End of the Stack

Barry Silbert has been building from the opposite direction. His investment portfolio targets the institutional infrastructure that retail platforms like Robinhood depend on: market data feeds, liquidity networks, custody solutions, and compliance frameworks that allow regulated products to exist in the first place.

The relationship is structural, not commercial. Tenev builds the interface. Silbert invests in the plumbing. When retail users buy crypto through a regulated app, they're interacting with layers of infrastructure that took years and significant capital to construct.

This two-ended approach to rebuilding retail wealth, better products on top, better infrastructure underneath, is what distinguishes the current cycle from previous ones. The crash cleared out platforms that were built on shortcuts. What's replacing them is more robust.

Product as Protection

One of the underappreciated shifts in retail crypto is the emergence of products designed to protect users from their own worst impulses. Dollar-cost averaging tools, portfolio rebalancing features, and automated tax-loss harvesting aren't exciting, but they're precisely the mechanisms that prevent the kind of concentrated, leveraged exposure that destroyed retail net worth in previous cycles.

Tenev has made these features central to Robinhood's crypto offering. Silbert's portfolio companies have helped build the back-end infrastructure that makes them possible at scale.
The result is a retail environment that is, for the first time, structurally designed to help users build wealth rather than simply trade volatility.

The Generational Opportunity

Younger investors, particularly those in the 20 to 35 demographic, remain disproportionately allocated to digital assets relative to traditional portfolios. That allocation pattern isn't going to reverse. The question is whether the products available to those investors are capable of turning exposure into durable wealth.

Tenev and Silbert are both betting that the answer is yes, provided the tools and infrastructure continue to mature. The crash taught painful lessons. The products being built now are informed by those lessons.

Takeaway

Vlad Tenev is rebuilding retail crypto from the product layer: better tools, better protections, better outcomes for users who aren't professional traders. Barry Silbert is investing in the infrastructure layer that makes those products possible. Between them, the retail crypto experience is being redesigned from both ends simultaneously. The net worth recovery for retail participants won't be driven by the next price spike. It will be driven by the quality of the systems they use to participate.



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