Coinbase Company

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Coinbase is the largest US crypto exchange offering trading, custody, staking, and its Base Layer 2 blockchain, trusted by 110M+ users and institutions.

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The Origin: From Airbnb Idea to Crypto Gateway

Coinbase launched in June 2012, born from a Y Combinator application where Brian Armstrong and Fred Ehrsam pitched a simple idea: make Bitcoin accessible to everyday people. The irony is that "Coinbase" wasn't originally meant to be an exchange at all — it was conceived as a payment platform where merchants could accept Bitcoin. Users kept asking to buy Bitcoin instead, so the exchange functionality was added almost as an afterthought. That pivot defined the company's trajectory.

Milestones That Shaped the Platform

  • 2012: Founded by Brian Armstrong and Fred Ehrsam; Y Combinator S12 batch
  • 2013: Andreessen Horowitz invests $5M — the first major VC bet on crypto infrastructure
  • 2014: Launches institutional custody service; reaches 1M users
  • 2017: Retail explosion during the ICO boom; 13M+ users, platform crashes from demand
  • 2018: Establishes Coinbase Custody (NYDFS-approved); launches Coinbase Commerce
  • 2021: Direct listing on NASDAQ (ticker: COIN) at $250/share — $85B opening valuation
  • 2023: Launches Base, an Ethereum Layer 2 optimistic rollup (in partnership with Optimism)
  • 2024: Spot Bitcoin ETF approved by SEC; Coinbase serves as custodian for BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust

Revenue Engine: Beyond Trading Fees

Coinbase's monetization has evolved significantly from its early reliance on trading spreads:

Revenue StreamDescription% of Revenue (2023)
Transaction revenueRetail and institutional trading fees~45%
Subscription & servicesStaking, custody, blockchain rewards~35%
Base network feesL2 transaction fees and sequencer revenueGrowing
USDC interestReserve yield on Circle's stablecoin (Coinbase co-creator)Variable

The strategic shift toward subscription revenue reflects an effort to reduce volatility — trading revenue fluctuates wildly with crypto market cycles, while staking and custody generate more predictable recurring income.

The Trust Moat: Why Institutions Choose Coinbase

Coinbase's primary competitive advantage isn't technology — it's regulatory trust. In an industry plagued by FTX collapses, SEC enforcement actions, and offshore opacity, Coinbase has invested heavily in compliance:

  • Public company transparency: Quarterly earnings, audited financials, public disclosures
  • Regulatory licenses: NYDFS BitLicense, money transmitter licenses across all 50 states
  • Proof of reserves: Publishes cryptographic proof of customer asset backing
  • SEC engagement: Despite regulatory friction, Coinbase engages with policymakers rather than avoiding them

This trust infrastructure is extraordinarily difficult for offshore competitors to replicate, especially in the US market. BlackRock chose Coinbase as its ETF custodian — a signal that institutional finance views Coinbase as the safest on-ramp.

Key Numbers

MetricValue
Monthly transacting users~8.2M (Q4 2023)
Verified users110M+
Assets on platform$130B+ (2024)
Listed assets200+ cryptocurrencies
Countries supported100+
Employees~3,700 (2024, down from peak 5,000+)
2023 Revenue$3.1B (up from $1.8B in 2022)
Base TVL$2B+ (launched mid-2023)

Interesting Details

Brian Armstrong originally worked at Airbnb and became interested in Bitcoin after traveling to Argentina during the 2011 debt crisis — he saw firsthand how volatile currencies devastate everyday people. His conviction that crypto could provide financial sovereignty became Coinbase's founding thesis.

The "Base" blockchain name is deliberate: it positions Coinbase not just as a trading venue but as foundational infrastructure for the next generation of internet applications. Base reached $2B+ in total value locked within its first year, making it one of the fastest-growing L2s.

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