coin

Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam sells $13M in COIN shares as ARK continues to divest

Major Coinbase shareholders have sold over $14 million of stocks over the past 48 hours.

According to public trading data, Coinbase co-founder Fred Ehrsam and ARK Invest have sold more than $14 million of Coinbase shares over the past 48 hours.

Information shared by Insider Tracker, a service that shares trading information of high-profile company executives and politicians, shows that Ehrsam sold 97.836 COIN shares for $13.2 million on Dec. 11.

Meanwhile, ARK Invest’s daily trade information newsletter, which provides updates on its actively managed exchange-traded funds (ETFs), showed that its ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) had offloaded some 10,933 COIN shares valued at around $1.5 million.

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Coinbase rolls out crypto transfers via links sent on WhatsApp, Telegram

Recipients need to download a Coinbase Wallet to receive the funds, but the crypto exchange says they’ve simplified the process for less tech-savvy users.

A new feature from Coinbase Wallet allows for the transfer of crypto through a link that can be sent through some of the most popular social media sites and messaging apps as the crypto exchange looks to make its service accessible to a wider market.

“Users can now send money on any platform that they can share a link,” Coinbase said in a Dec. 5 blog post, naming apps like iMessage, Telegram, WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

There’s no payment fee when sending USD Coin (USDC), a U.S. dollar stablecoin Coinbase co-launched in 2018 with its issuer, Circle.

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‘Surgical removal’ of crypto will only weaken USD dominance, commentators say

A day after Coinbase received an SEC Wells notice, industry commentators weighed in on what recent regulator actions mean for America’s crypto future.

The United States’ crackdown on cryptocurrencies and firms will only serve to stifle crypto-related innovation and “weaken” the country, said industry pundits in the wake of Coinbase’s recent Wells notice.

On March 22, crypto exchange Coinbase became the latest crypto firm to receive a “legal threat” — in the form of a Wells notice, just a month after stablecoin-issuer Paxos received its own in February. Some suggest there could be more to come.

Mati Greenspan, the chief of crypto research firm Quantum Economics said he believes U.S. regulators have been unfriendly to crypto “since the beginning.”

The recent collapses of crypto and startup-friendly banks, including Silvergate, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank have been viewed by some as being part of a scheme by regulators to un-bank the crypto sector, dubbed “Operation Choke Point 2.0.”

Meanwhile, a March 20 economic report from the White House turned into a scathing review of the merits of crypto assets, spending almost an entire chapter debunking its “touted” benefits.

Greenspan told Cointelegraph that the rumored action could be underway as crypto is seen as a “threat” to the U.S. dollar’s dominance in global trade — a major and long-standing benefit to the U.S.

However, as more are beginning to use crypto for cross-border remittances globally, he warned a crackdown on crypto in the U.S. could actually have the opposite effect on the dollar:

“The surgical removal of cryptocurrencies from the U.S. banking system will only isolate the United States further and weaken the dollar’s position as the global reserve currency.”

Adrian Przelozny, CEO of crypto exchange Independent Reserve told Cointelegraph the recent banking sector woes were not due to “any failure in crypto” but caused by banks managing their risks in an “irresponsible way.”

“The White House would be better served to review the practices in the banking industry,” he added.

Speaking about the most recent action against Coinbase, Przelozny said the “adversarial environment for the crypto industry” in the U.S. will push the related “jobs, investment and future innovation” offshore.

“Singapore, Hong Kong and potentially Australia” who are eyeing the benefits of the industry may prove a better home for it and those countries “will reap the economic benefits,” Przelozny said.

Related: Banks and the Fed have a problem — What about crypto?

The exact reasons the regulator is targeting Coinbase are still unclear. The SEC have declined to comment on the matter.

Michael Bacina, a lawyer and partner at Piper Alderman agreed that a “regulation by enforcement model” will “drive crypto-asset innovation offshore,” and added:

“This is a strange position to adopt given the losses many faced in the last 12 months arose from collapses involving unregulated offshore structures.”

Bacina said for years the industry has asked for clarity on how to comply. He pointed to the recent “telling” comments made by the judge in Voyager Digital’s bankruptcy case which “observed that there is no clear guidance from regulators.”

He added until governments lay out the path to regulatory compliance, offshore jurisdictions will continue to harbor crypto firms “which will cost jobs and raise the risk for consumers and investors.”

Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs and other risks loom

‘Surgical removal’ of crypto will only weaken USD dominance, commentators say

A day after Coinbase received a Wells notice from the Securities and Exchange Commission, industry commentators weighed in on what recent regulatory actions mean for America’s crypto future.

The United States’ crackdown on cryptocurrencies and crypto firms will only serve to stifle crypto-related innovation and “weaken” the country, industry pundits say in the wake of Coinbase’s recent Wells notice from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

On March 22, the crypto exchange became the latest crypto firm to receive a “legal threat” — a Wells notice — just a month after stablecoin-issuer Paxos received its own in February. Some suggest there could be more to come.

Mati Greenspan, the chief of crypto research firm Quantum Economics, said he believes U.S. regulators have been unfriendly to crypto “since the beginning.”

The recent collapses of crypto and startup-friendly banks, including Silvergate, Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, have been viewed by some as being part of a scheme by regulators to un-bank the crypto sector, dubbed “Operation Choke Point 2.0.”

Meanwhile, a March 20 economic report from the White House turned into a scathing review of the merits of crypto assets, with the paper spending almost an entire chapter debunking crypto’s “touted” benefits.

Greenspan told Cointelegraph that the rumored action could be underway as crypto is seen as a “threat” to the U.S. dollar’s dominance in global trade — a significant and long-standing benefit to the U.S.

However, as more are beginning to use crypto for cross-border remittances globally, he warned a crackdown on crypto in the U.S. could actually have the opposite effect on the dollar:

“The surgical removal of cryptocurrencies from the U.S. banking system will only isolate the United States further and weaken the dollar’s position as the global reserve currency.”

Adrian Przelozny, CEO of Australian crypto exchange Independent Reserve, told Cointelegraph that the recent banking sector woes were not due to “any failure in crypto” but caused by banks managing their risks in an “irresponsible way.”

“The White House would be better served to review the practices in the banking industry,” he added.

Speaking about the most recent action against Coinbase, Przelozny said the “adversarial environment for the crypto industry” in the U.S. would push the related “jobs, investment and future innovation” offshore.

“Singapore, Hong Kong and potentially Australia” — who are eyeing the benefits of the crypto industry — may prove a better home for it, and those countries “will reap the economic benefits,” Przelozny said.

Related: Banks and the Fed have a problem — What about crypto?

The exact reasons the regulator is targeting Coinbase are still unclear. The SEC has declined to comment on the matter.

Michael Bacina, a lawyer and partner at Piper Alderman, agreed that a “regulation by enforcement model” would “drive crypto-asset innovation offshore,” adding:

“This is a strange position to adopt given the losses many faced in the last 12 months arose from collapses involving unregulated offshore structures.”

Bacina said for years, the industry has asked for clarity on how to comply. He pointed to the recent “telling” comments made by the judge in Voyager Digital’s bankruptcy case that “observed that there is no clear guidance from regulators.”

He added that offshore jurisdictions would continue harboring crypto firms until governments lay out the path to regulatory compliance, “which will cost jobs and raise the risk for consumers and investors.”

Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs and other risks loom

Cathie Wood’s ARK ignores Silvergate, buys Coinbase stock for 6th straight month

ARK appears unfazed by Silvergate as it increases Coinbase exposure by over 700,000 shares in 2023.

Bitcoin (BTC) exchange Coinbase has remained a firm “buy” for ARK Invest throughout its recent price drop.

The latest data shows ARK continuing to buy Coinbase shares despite bankruptcy concerns over  Silvergate Bank — a major Coinbase partner.

ARK ETF keeps topping up on Coinbase stock

In the latest demonstration of its fearless approach to the crypto space, ARK purchased another 47,568 shares of Coinbase on March 7.

This adds to the roughly 6 million shares already held in ARK’s ARKK exchange-traded fund (ETF) at the start of the month, and is already its third purchase of the week.

Coinbase has been under pressure since the start of February, dropping from local highs of $87.50 to current levels of $61.69 — a decrease of almost 30% in just over a month, according to data from TradingView.

COIN/USD 1-day candle chart (Nasdaq). Source: TradingView

While Silvergate precipitated fresh scrutiny regarding crypto exchanges in particular, events have not fazed ARK and its CEO Cathie Wood, known for bucking the trend and increasing exposure to assets such as Coinbase, even during the 2022 bear market.

In a recent edition of its weekly newsletter released on Feb. 27, ARK hinted at its rationale, voicing excitement at Coinbase announcing its Ethereum layer-2 network, Base.

“In our view, Coinbase’s decision to build and integrate its services into a decentralized crypto infrastructure highlights its deep alignment with the fair, transparent, and accessible financial services that public blockchains aim to offer,” it wrote.

“While it will not derive transaction revenue from Base at launch, Coinbase is likely to benefit financially if its Wallet serves as a trusted on-ramp and access point to applications on the network as it scales.”

ARKK COIN holdings chart. Source: Cathie’s Ark

The buy-ins have come at a price — the firm’s cost basis is currently at $254 per share, far in excess of its current value.

GBTC inches higher as Bitcoin ETF battle hits court

Also benefiting this week is the largest Bitcoin institutional investment vehicle, the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC).

Related: GBTC approval could return a ‘couple billion dollars’ to investors: Grayscale CEO

Amid crunchtime for owner Grayscale in its long-running battle to convert and launch GBTC as an ETF in the United States, the trust saw a modest uptick in value as the week began.

A court is currently deciding whether U.S. regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission, has the right to continue denying the launch of the market’s first Bitcoin spot price ETF.

GBTC remains near a record discount to the Bitcoin spot price, with its shares trading at an implied price nearly 50% lower than BTC/USD, per data from monitoring resource Coinglass.

As ever with the ETF narrative, criticism remained.

“GBTC spot ETF approval would dump the price of BTC and pump the ETF,” statistician Willy Woo argued on March 8.

“The pent up sell pressure on GBTC which accumulated during the bear market (as reflected in the GBTC discount) would be released onto the open market.”

GBTC premium vs. asset holdings vs. BTC/USD chart. Source: Coinglass

ARK meanwhile owns 5.53 million GBTC shares, having most recently increased exposure in November 2022, immediately after the FTX debacle broke. In January, it reduced its holdings by 500,000 shares.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the authors’ alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Cathie Wood’s ARK adds $12.1M in Coinbase shares amid turbulent markets

Ark Investments topped up its Coinbase stock shortly after FTX’s liquidity issues were revealed, which came after Coinbase stated that it had “minimal exposure” to the troubled trading platform.

Amid the FTX and crypto market chaos, Cathie Wood-led Ark Investments has increased its Coinbase stock holdings with a purchase of 237,675 Coinbase shares worth about $12.1 million on Nov. 9. 

Of the 237,675 Coinbase shares, Ark Investment Management added 207,527 shares to its ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund (ETF) (ARKK), 22,416 shares to its ARK Next Generation Internet ETF (ARKW) and another 7,732 shares to its ARK Fintech Innovation ETF (ARKF).

The tech-focused investment firm’s purchase came after Coinbase stated in response to FTX’s liquidity crisis that it has “minimal exposure” to the now cash-strapped cryptocurrency trading platform with only $15 million on deposit to “facilitate business operations and customer trades.”

Coinbase also added that it has no exposure to FTX’s native token, FTX Token (FTT) — which has fallen 84.08% since Binance announced its decision to liquidate its entire FTT holdings late on Nov. 7 — and its partner trading firm Alameda Research.

Wood’s Nov. 9 purchase came following a 10.84% fall in Coinbase’s share price on Nov. 8, which was an expected result follow on from the FTX controversy, according to Owen Lau, a stock analyst at investment banking firm Oppenheimer:

“While COIN has minimal exposure to FTX, before there is enough evidence that the contagion risk is contained, the pressure on crypto prices will likely weigh on COIN.”

It was also the investment firm’s first trade for Coinbase since it sold off over 1.4 million of its shares — which were then worth $75 million — across ARKK, ARKF and ARKW on July 26. 2022.

The large sell-off came in response to the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) conducting an investigation into allegations of Coinbase engaging in the insider trading of unregistered securities.

However, Wood’s latest buying spree has brought the firm’s Coinbase shares tally back up to 7.625 million, which is about one million shares less than its peak of 8.675 million recorded on July 20. 2022, according to data from Cathie’s Ark.

Coinbase now has the 11th largest holdings in Ark’s main investment fund, ARKK, which now represents 3.79% of the portfolio. Coinbase’s stock went up 10.74% on Thursday, increasing its share price to $50.92, according to Yahoo Finance.

Related: Breaking: Google taps Coinbase to bring crypto payments to cloud services

On Nov. 10, Coinbase said it was eliminating 60 positions at the firm. 

“Today’s actions were surgical. We are just making sure we are not wasting a dollar,” said Coinbase chief financial officer Alesia Haas, according to a Nov. 10 report from Bloomberg.

“If we see that there is going to be further depressed revenue, and if we believe this is going to impact beyond the scenarios we have already planned for, we will have to take further cost-saving action.”

Update Nov. 11, 3:55 am UTC: Added reports that Coinbase will cut 60 positions at the firm. 

Cathie Wood’s ARK adds $12.1M in Coinbase shares amid turbulent markets

Ark Investments topped up its Coinbase stock shortly after FTX’s liquidity issues were revealed, which came after Coinbase stated that it had “minimal exposure” to the troubled trading platform.

Amid the FTX and crypto market chaos, Cathie Wood-led Ark Investments has increased its Coinbase (COIN) holdings with a purchase of 237,675 COIN shares worth about $12.1 million on Nov. 9. 

Of the 237,675 COIN shares, Ark Investment Management added 207,527 shares to its ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK), 22,416 shares to its ARK Next Generation Internet ETF (ARKW), and another 7,732 shares to its ARK Fintech Innovation ETF (ARKF).

The tech-focused investment firm’s purchase came after Coinbase stated in response to FTX’s liquidity crisis that it has “minimal exposure” to the now cash-strapped cryptocurrency trading platform with only $15 million on deposit to “facilitate business operations and customer trades.”

Coinbase also added that it has no exposure to FTX’s native token FTT — which has fallen 84.08% since Binance announced its decision to liquidate its entire FTT holdings late on Nov. 7 — and its partner trading firm Alameda Research.

Wood’s Nov. 9 purchase came following a 10.84% fall in COIN’s share price on Nov. 8, which was an expected result follow on from the FTX controversy, according to Owen Lau, a stock analyst at investment banking firm Oppenheimer:

“While COIN has minimal exposure to FTX, before there is enough evidence that the contagion risk is contained, the pressure on crypto prices will likely weigh on COIN.”

It was also the investment firm’s first trade for Coinbase since it sold off over 1.4 million COIN shares — which were then worth $75 million — across ARKK, ARKF and ARKW on Jul. 26. 2022.

The large sell-off came in response to the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) conducting an investigation into allegations of Coinbase engaging in the insider trading of unregistered securities.

However, Wood’s latest buying spree has brought the firm’s COIN shares tally back up to 7.625 million, which is about one million shares less than its peak of 8.675 million recorded on Jul. 20. 2022, according to data from Cathie’s Ark.

Coinbase now has the 11th largest holdings in Ark’s main investment fund ARKK, which now represents 3.79% of the portfolio. COIN’s stock went up 10.74% on Thursday, increasing its share price to $50.92, according to Yahoo Finance.

Related: Breaking: Google taps Coinbase to bring crypto payments to cloud services

On Nov. 10, Coinbase said it was eliminating 60 positions at the firm. 

“Today’s actions were surgical. We are just making sure we are not wasting a dollar,” said Coinbase CFOAlesia Haas, according to a Nov. 10 report from Bloomberg.

“If we see that there is going to be further depressed revenue, and if we believe this is going to impact beyond the scenarios we have already planned for, we will have to take further cost-saving action.”

Update Nov. 11, 3:55 am UTC: Added reports that Coinbase will cut 60 positions at the firm. 

Coinbase stock (COIN) in danger of another 60% crash by September — Here’s why

COIN could tumble to $21 in the next few months amid Coinbase’s insider trading allegations and weak technicals.

Coinbase (COIN) stock bounced by 4.35% to $57 on July 27 after shedding roughly 20% over the past week. But more downside is likely despite the release of Coinbase’s first installment of the Bored Ape Yacht Club-featured movie called The Degen Trilogy.

Bad news stalls COIN’s rally

Overall, COIN is down roughly 83% since its Nasdaq debut in April 2021 with more losses possible due to weak fundamentals and bearish technicals.

To recap, COIN reached $79 on July 20, five days after breaking out of its “ascending triangle” pattern. As a rule, COIN’s profit target was supposed to be around $120, up over 130% from July 27’s price.

Nonetheless, the stock’s bullish reversal stopped midway after reaching $79, mired by back-to-back negative pieces of news. 

Initially, COIN’s correction began in the wake of a broader retreat in the crypto market, led by Bitcoin (BTC). Then, the downside move picked up momentum after U.S. authorities arrested a former Coinbase manager on “insider trading” allegations.

COIN daily price chart. Source: TradingView

But the biggest selloff during this correction came on July 26 after Bloomberg reported that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Coinbase for listing unregistered securities.

In response, Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment Management sold over 1.4 million out of nearly 9 million Coinbase shares.

COIN dropped by over 21% to close July 26 at $52.93 while testing the ascending triangle’s upper trendline as support. In the process, COIN wiped out its entire bullish reversal breakout move.

Bearish continuation setup returns

Ascending triangles are typically continuation patterns. Therefore, COIN risks facing more losses in the coming days if it moves back inside its ascending triangle range.

Related: IMF global outlook suggests dark clouds ahead for crypto

On the daily chart, a drop below the triangle’s upper trendline could have COIN test the lower trendline near $45 for a breakdown.

Ideally, such a bearish move will push the stock toward the level at length equal to the maximum distance between the triangle’s upper and lower trendline.

COIN daily price chart featuring ascending triangle breakdown setup. Source: TradingView

In other words, COIN stock price could decline toward $21 by September, almost 60% lower than July 27’s price.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.