The Korea Times

Coinbase brings crypto to Wall Street

Debut of bitcoin exchange will be test for investors’ belief in cryptocurr­ency

-

— The arrival Wednesday of cryptocurr­ency exchange Coinbase on Nasdaq is one of the most anticipate­d events of the year on Wall Street, where enthusiasm for record-breaking bitcoin is in full swing, despite questions about the sustainabi­lity of the market.

The first company devoted entirely to cryptocurr­ency to enter the US stock exchange, Coinbase — which will be listed under the symbol COIN — is already a heavyweigh­t.

The Nasdaq on Tuesday night set a reference price for the company at $250 per share. Taking into account the shares in circulatio­n, stock options and restricted shares, Coinbase’s overall valuation will begin at $65.3 billion.

That makes Coinbase the biggest new U.S. stock market entrant since Uber in 2019.

Coinbase chose a direct listing, which does not allow it to raise new funds but does offer current shareholde­rs — founders, employees and historical investors — the opportunit­y to sell their stocks on the market.

Spotify, Slack, Palantir and Roblox had also used this method for their Wall Street debuts.

Nearly 115 million Coinbase shares will be put on the market. Their reference price will be announced Tuesday evening.

Bitcoin success

Founded in 2012 in San Francisco by Brian Armstrong and Fred Ehrsam, the platform allows users to buy and sell about 50 cryptocurr­encies, including bitcoin and ether.

Coinbase claims 56 million total users and a little more than six million people making transactio­ns each month, according to estimates from its first-quarter results, released in early April.

The company has benefited from bitcoin’s meteoric rise over the past year, with the crypto asset’s price rising from $6,500 last April to a record-high above $63,000 on Tuesday.

In the wake of the reigning cryptocurr­ency, other virtual currencies — such as ether, Litecoin or Stellar Lumens — have also surged.

“With bitcoin already having more than doubled in the last six months and cryptocurr­encies becoming more popular with more mainstream investors, it can certainly be argued that crypto has become more mainstream in the last 12 months,” said Michael Hewson, the chief market analyst at CMC Markets U.K.

As a result of this craze, Coinbase’s revenue has increased almost tenfold in the course of a year to $1.8 billion in the first quarter, according to group estimates.

Its profit increased 25-fold, in the range of $730 to $800 million.

The success of Coinbase and cryptocurr­encies in general has given some rivals ideas: the head of the California-based cryptocurr­ency exchange platform Kraken told CNBC last week he hopes to take his company public next year, also via a direct listing.

Government concern

If the situation seems favorable to Coinbase, caution remains the order of the day among observers, who recall the company’s dependence on the price of virtual currencies, which tend to be volatile.

Before its spectacula­r rise in recent months, bitcoin had experience­d setbacks, particular­ly in 2018 when it kept falling.

Some also are drawing attention to the distrust of lawmakers in several countries who are concerned about cryptocurr­encies being used for illicit purposes.

“Will Coinbase prove popular with retail investors? There is little doubt about that prospect with demand and interest set to be high,” Hewson said.

“The bigger question is whether any valuation is sustainabl­e, particular­ly given how many government­s aren’t particular­ly enamored of cryptocurr­encies,” he said.

“Future regulation is likely to be a clear and present danger and a probable headwind” in the long term.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? The Coinbase logo is seen in the background as a person checks cryptocurr­encies prizes on a smartphone in Los Angeles, April 13.
AFP-Yonhap The Coinbase logo is seen in the background as a person checks cryptocurr­encies prizes on a smartphone in Los Angeles, April 13.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic