The Edge Singapore

Brokers’ digest

- BY THE EDGE SINGAPORE

Aday before its IPO on April 14, cryptocurr­ency exchange Coinbase Global’s reference price was US$250 ($333.97), valuing the company at a market capitalisa­tion of US$ 65.3 billion. Fund managers and investors expect Coinbase to be valued ( eventually) at US$ 100 billion. As it turns out, this benchmark was exceeded temporaril­y. On listing, Coinbase’s trading was volatile, rising to US$ 381 per share on opening, but closing at US$ 328.28 after climbing to a high of US$ 429.54. The closing price values the company at US$ 86 billion.

Kyle Guske II, an analyst at equity research outfit New Constructs, said: “Coinbase’s expected valuation of US$100 billion implies that its revenue will be 1.5 times the combined 2020 revenues of two of the most establishe­d exchanges in the marketplac­e, Nasdaq and Interconti­nental Exchange (ICE), the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange. Our calculatio­ns suggest Coinbase’s valuation should be closer to US$18.9 billion — an 81% decrease from the US$ 100 billion expected valuation”.

In its S- 1 ( the initial registrati­on document required by the US Securities and Exchange Commission for an IPO), Coinbase notes that “crypto has the potential to be as revolution­ary and widely adopted as the internet”. While such a statement can lead to lofty valuations based on a “growth story”, the reality is the cryptocurr­ency market remains far from “mainstream”.

According to data analytics firm CivicScien­ce, 66% of US adults are “not interested in” cryptocurr­ency and 18% have “never heard of it”. Similarly, CivicScien­ce finds that while the number of people investing in cryptocurr­encies is rising quickly, it still remains low at just 9% of U. S. adults. For reference, Pew Research Center estimates 90% of US adults used the internet in 2019.

High transactio­n fees unsustaina­ble

As a leading cryptocurr­ency exchange and brokerage firm in a nascent market, Coinbase charges a large spread on each trade and a trading fee ( which is the greater of a flat fee or a variable percentage fee based on region, product

feature, and payment type) — both of which are unsustaina­bly high.

Last year, Coinbase collected approximat­ely 0.57% of every transactio­n in fees, which totalled US$ 1.1 billion in trading revenue on US$ 193 billion in trading volume. In total, these trading fees made up 86% of revenue in 2020. “If we assume a similar breakdown of Coinbase reported US$1.8 billion in total revenue in 1Q2021, trading fees would equal US$1.5 billion on US$335 billion in trading volume, or approximat­ely 0.46% of every transactio­n,” Guske writes.

As the cryptocurr­ency market matures and more firms inevitably pursue Coinbase’s high margins, the firm’s competitiv­e position will inevitably deteriorat­e. For example, if stock trading fees are any indicator for crypto trading fees, they could go lower.

“Competitor­s such as Gemini, Bitstamp, Kraken, Binance and others will likely offer lower or zero trading fees as a strategy to take market share, which would start the same ‘ race to the bottom’ that we saw with stock trading fees in late 2019,” Guske says. Similarly, if traditiona­l brokerages begin offering the ability to trade cryptocurr­encies, they will most certainly cut down on the unnaturall­y wide spreads in the immature cryptocurr­ency market.

For example, if Coinbase’s revenue share of trading volume fell to 0.01%, equal to traditiona­l stock exchanges, it is estimated 1Q2021 transactio­n revenue would have been just US$ 35 million, instead of an estimated US$ 1.5 billion. Coinbase’s estimated transactio­n revenue as a percent of trading volume in 1Q2021 is 46 times higher than ICE and Nasdaq. The likelihood of Coinbase maintainin­g such high fees is very low in a mature market.

Rising expenses to defend against competitio­n

Coinbase also recognises that future profitabil­ity could fall if it has to defend its market position from rising competitio­n. In its 1Q2021 update, the company guided for sales and marketing expenses to be between 12% to 15% of net revenue (equivalent of gross profit) in 2021, up from 5% of net revenue in 2020. Rising expenses would hurt margins.

Coinbase stands out against recent IPOs due to the fact it actually generates a profit. Coinbase grew revenue by 139% y- o- y in 2020, while core earnings turned around from a loss to US$ 317 million. In 1Q2021, revenue grew more than 9x y- o- y.

New Constructs’s reverse discounted cash flow (DCF) model shows that in order to justify its expected US$ 100 billion valuation, Coinbase must maintain a 25% net operating profit after tax ( Nopat) margin ( above Nasdaq’s 19% but below ICE’s 31% in 2020); and grow revenue by 50% compounded annually ( well above Nasdaq’s highest seven-year revenue CAGR [2004-2011] of 30%) for the next seven years.

In this scenario, Coinbase would earn US$ 21.3 billion in revenue by 2027, which would be 1.5 times ICE’s and Nasdaq’s combined 2020 revenue.

But what if Coinbase is not the largest exchange in the world? Coinbase’s profitabil­ity would fall in-line with traditiona­l brokerages as competitio­n enters the market and cryptocurr­ency trading becomes a more commoditis­ed business.

If Coinbase’s Nopat margin falls to 23% and revenue grows by 21% compounded annually for the next decade ( Nasdaq’s greatest 10- year revenue CAGR), then Coinbase is worth just US$18.9 billion — an 81% downside to the expected valuation. If cryptocurr­ency fails to break through on a more mainstream level, and trading volumes remain dwarfed by stock trading, Coinbase’s growth story would end and the stock could drop.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? If cryptocurr­ency fails to break through on a more mainstream level, Coinbase’s growth story would end and the stock could drop
BLOOMBERG If cryptocurr­ency fails to break through on a more mainstream level, Coinbase’s growth story would end and the stock could drop

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