Coinbase, Senate crypto and stablecoin rewards
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Crypto industry leaders scrambled Thursday to salvage the market structure bill—but some conceded the bill now has lower chances of passage.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said the exchange cannot support the Senate Banking Committee’s latest draft of the CLARITY Act, warning that the bill, as
Coinbase Global (COIN) stock has declined by 15.1% over 21 trading days. The recent decline is indicative of increased regulatory scrutiny and the vulnerability
Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, has changed his mind about the major bipartisan crypto regulation bill before the U.S. Senate.
In recent days, Coinbase Global has attracted renewed attention after multiple major Wall Street firms upgraded the company to Buy, citing its expanded focus on crypto infrastructure and multi-asset trading,
Bank of America said Coinbase shares could surge 38%, given its potential to lead a new financial system through RWA tokenization and prediction markets.
Coinbase’s revolt pauses the CLARITY Act, but senators, crypto leaders, and the White House signal US crypto reform is still moving forward.
In a dramatic turn that caught Washington off guard, Coinbase Global Inc. (NASDAQ: COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong pulled his company’s support for the Senate Banking Committee’s crypto market structure bill late Wednesday evening, less than 24 hours before lawmakers were set to vote on the legislation.
Coinbase plans 2026 expansion with crypto, equities, and commodities trading, plus stablecoin growth and Base chain adoption.
Over the past few weeks, I had the opportunity to sit down with Shan Aggarwal, Coinbase's newly appointed Chief Business Officer—a first-of-its-kind role at the crypto exchange. Shan’s background defies the conventional tech-executive mold: having ...