In a major move for on-chain real-world assets, Robinhood tokenized stocks expanded rapidly on Arbitrum with a new wave of equity contracts.
On December 17, on-chain data shows a single Robinhood-linked deployer address launched 500 new tokenized stock contracts on the Arbitrum network within 24 hours. This marks the largest single-day stock token deployment recorded on Arbitrum to date.
Arbiscan labels the address as “Robinhood: Deployer”, a known wallet tied to Robinhood-related infrastructure. By the end of the day, its cumulative total reached 1,997 tokenized stock contracts, confirming a structured, large-scale rollout rather than a one-off experiment.
Moreover, an update from Wu reiterated that, according to the Arbiscan browser, Robinhood: Deployer pushed 500 stock tokens on Arbitrum on December 17, the highest single-day deployment so far.
The same wallet has now cumulatively deployed 1,997 stock tokens, underscoring a sustained strategy.
Transaction data reveals hundreds of consecutive contract-creation calls originating from the same deployer address in a tight time window.
Each transaction deployed a new token contract with zero ETH transferred, aligning with standardized smart contract issuance rather than end-user trading activity.
Each contract pointed to a single, shared destination address, indicating a factory-style system for token creation. However, the standout detail is efficiency: every contract was deployed for roughly $0.03, showing how templated infrastructure can scale equity token issuance cheaply on Arbitrum.
Historically, tokenized equity launches have appeared gradually over weeks. In contrast, the same deployer compressed hundreds of onchain stock deployments into a single day. That said, the pace suggests infrastructure readiness and confidence in the template design, not mere testing.
With the latest batch included, Robinhood-linked contracts on Arbitrum now total 1,997 tokenized stocks. This volume helps position Arbitrum among the largest venues worldwide for on-chain equity representations when measured by contract count.
Moreover, the near-2,000 contract figure implies broad market coverage. It likely spans major U.S. equities, ETFs and potentially some international listings, pointing to a full-catalog approach instead of a narrow, selective set of symbols.
The team has not yet publicly indexed individual token metadata, so detailed asset mappings remain opaque for now.
However, the scale of this tokenized equities rollout indicates Robinhood is building comprehensive stock token infrastructure ahead of opening access to retail or institutional users.
So far, there is no visible liquidity activation connected to these contracts. No large transfers, major mint events, or exchange deposit flows have followed the deployments. This pattern points to a backend preparation phase where contracts are deployed first, then integrated into user-facing products later.
Despite the size of the rollout, Arbitrum gas metrics and on-chain volumes stayed stable during the push. There was no spike in network congestion, transaction fees, or MEV activity tied to the deployer wallet, reinforcing the interpretation of a controlled, non-speculative rollout.
But the absence of immediate trading does not diminish the signal. The presence of nearly 2,000 stock contracts shows that the asset layer for real world asset tokens is already in place, even if order books and user interfaces are not yet live.
Tokenized equity products require strict compliance checks, custody arrangements and front-end integration before launch. On-chain evidence now indicates that these preparatory steps are converging, with the contracts themselves already instantiated on Arbitrum.
Robinhood has not issued any public announcement specifically tied to this deployment wave. Nevertheless, the on-chain pattern leaves little doubt that the company is positioning Arbitrum as a core settlement layer for stock tokens on Robinhood, with infrastructure designed to support 24/5 trading of U.S. blue-chip shares.
In addition, the scale and speed of robinhood tokenized stocks on Arbitrum demonstrate a clear intent to compete in the tokenized equities market. If and when liquidity and UI integration follow, these 1,997 contracts could quickly evolve into one of the largest live catalogs of tokenized stocks globally.
So, Robinhood’s December 17 deployment of 500 new contracts, lifting its total to 1,997 on Arbitrum, signals that large-scale tokenized stock infrastructure is no longer theoretical but actively being put in place.

