That's debatable. When it comes to crypto, most people only care about prices, and those have been on a tear lately. Bitcoin has more than doubled in the last year to around $58,000. More than 20 crypto ETFs holding $54 billion in digital assets are trading in the U.S. Crypto is more widely held than ever and has become an important topic in the presidential election. With Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao and FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried now both in prison, Armstrong has emerged as the movement's most prominent spokesperson.
Given that Coinbase's stock mirrors trading in Bitcoin, Armstrong is a billionaire seven times over at age 41. The cryptocurrency exchange he cofounded 12 years ago to become the "Gmail for Bitcoin" has a market capitalization of $40 billion and crypto assets under its custody of $270 billion. That includes holding more than $20 billion for BlackRock ($10 trillion in assets under management), now the world's largest crypto ETF provider. In 2023, the company, which makes most of its money from trading fees, netted 895 million on revenue of $3.1 billion. This year is on track to be much better: In the first six months of 2024, Coinbase's revenue amounted to $3.1 billion but net income soared to $1.2 billion.
If there were such a thing as a "Too Big to Fail" institution in the world of digital assets, Coinbase would be it. Just in terms of Bitcoin, Coinbase has custody of 11% of all tokens in existence. For crypto's second-most important currency, Ether, its share is even larger at an estimated 14% of all tokens. If Coinbase imploded, the consequences could be catastrophic.
Not everyone is a fan. In June 2023, the Securities and Exchange Commission sued Coinbase for acting as an unregistered exchange, brokerdealer and clearing firm-all activities it engages in for more than 14,500 institutions, as well as 8 million active retail customers. The case is likely to go to trial in 2025.
Crypto evangelists hate the idea of centralized power, but operationally, Coinbase is more similar to other command-and-control financial institutions like JPMorgan than it is to something like an employee-owned credit union. Its main businesses are trading, custody and co-managing (with Circle) a huge (835 billion) stablecoin operation that pegs the value of the USDC token to the U.S. dollar. Coinbase's dominant position allows it to charge high fees. Purchasing $5,000 of Bitcoin on the exchange will cost you $90. On Kraken it costs $20, and on Robinhood it's free.
But Armstrong is a crypto idealist, and he isn't entirely happy with this state of affairs. He wants to disrupt his money machine, creating a whole new infrastructure for rapid-fire transactions, which will not only lower fees but also weaken the control of big tech and financial firms.
"The whole reason I got into this and the mission of Coinbase is around increasing economic freedom in the world," he says. "The vision here is that crypto is going to power more and more of global GDP. [It will] create sound money, sound financial infrastructure for people...