COIN

Coinbase Price

COIN
$214.75
+$14.04(+6.99%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-11 22:25 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-11 22:25, Coinbase (COIN) is priced at $214.75, with a total market cap of $52.99B, a P/E ratio of 46.66, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $192.80 and $217.85. The current price is 11.38% above the day's low and 1.42% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 12.90M. Over the past 52 weeks, COIN has traded between $134.10 to $444.64, and the current price is -51.70% away from the 52-week high.

COIN Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$192.96
Market Cap$52.99B
Volume12.90M
P/E Ratio46.66
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Diluted EPS (TTM)3.02
Net Income (FY)$1.26B
Revenue (FY)$7.18B
Earnings Date2026-07-30
EPS Estimate0.16
Revenue Estimate$1.41B
Shares Outstanding274.65M
Beta (1Y)3.381

About COIN

Coinbase Global, Inc. provides financial infrastructure and technology for the cryptoeconomy in the United States and internationally. It offers the primary financial account in the cryptoeconomy for consumers; a marketplace with a pool of liquidity for transacting in crypto assets for institutions; and technology and services that enable developers to build crypto-based applications and securely accept crypto assets as payment. The company was founded in 2012 and is based in Wilmington, Delaware.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryFinancial - Data & Stock Exchanges
CEOBrian Armstrong
HeadquartersNew York City,NY,US
Official Websitehttps://www.coinbase.com
Employees (FY)4.95K
Average Revenue (1Y)$1.45M
Net Income per Employee$254.56K

Learn More about Coinbase (COIN)

Coinbase (COIN) FAQ

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Coinbase (COIN) is currently trading at $214.75, with a 24h change of +6.99%. The 52-week trading range is $134.10–$444.64.

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Coinbase (COIN) Latest News

2026-05-11 09:31Crypto-Linked U.S. Stocks Mixed in Premarket Trading; CRCL Up 6.91%According to msx.com data, crypto-linked U.S. stocks showed mixed movement in premarket trading on May 11. CRCL rose 6.91%, while COIN gained 0.32%, MSTR advanced 0.90%, and MARA climbed 0.85%. SBET declined 0.67%.2026-05-11 03:58JPMorgan Forecasts Institutional Crypto Inflows to Drive 2026 Rally, Bitcoin Production Cost at $77KAccording to TheStreet and JPMorgan's analysis team led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, the bank maintains a bullish outlook for the cryptocurrency market in 2026 despite recent volatility. JPMorgan expects institutional capital inflows and regulatory clarity to support digital asset gains, with the bank noting that 2026 growth will be "primarily driven by institutional investors." The bank estimates Bitcoin's production cost at approximately $77,000 per coin. If BTC trades significantly below this level for an extended period, some miners may exit the market, which could lower overall production costs and create a self-correcting mechanism.2026-05-08 10:13Bitcoin Miner Cango Produces 230.04 BTC in April, Reserves Hit 1057.46According to Cango's April operational update, the Nasdaq-listed bitcoin miner produced 230.04 BTC with an average cash cost of $68,061 per coin. As of April 30, the company's bitcoin reserves rose to 1057.46 BTC. Cango's total operating hashrate reached 31.58 EH/s, comprising 20.43 EH/s from self-mining and 11.15 EH/s from hashrate leasing.2026-05-08 09:30U.S. Crypto-Linked Stocks Show Mixed Pre-Market Moves on May 8; CRCL Up 1.48%, COIN Down 2.14%According to msx.com data, crypto-linked U.S. stock futures showed mixed moves in pre-market trading on May 8. CRCL rose 1.48%, MSTR gained 0.92%, and ABTC climbed 0.86%, while COIN fell 2.14% and SBET declined 0.13%.2026-05-08 04:55Whale Linked to Erik Voorhees Purchases 2,920 ETH for 6.67M USDT at $2,284According to Lookonchain, a whale associated with Erik Voorhees purchased 2,920 ETH for 6.67 million USDT at $2,284 per coin today. The same whale previously accumulated 123,184 ETH worth approximately $266 million.

Hot Posts About Coinbase (COIN)

CoinWay

CoinWay

5 minutes ago
ETH is almost at 2400, but the altcoin season is making me increasingly uneasy: because retail investors are starting to get excited There is a magical rule in the crypto world: When the words “hundredfold coin” start appearing frequently in the group, the risk has usually already quietly arrived. Recently, market sentiment has indeed been very intense. BTC has regained stability above 81k, ETH is approaching 2400, and altcoins seem to have taken an energy booster. Especially the PayFi sector, which is leading the gains. Many people are beginning to ask: Is the altcoin season officially starting? My answer is: It looks like it, but not completely. A true super altcoin season must be accompanied by two phenomena: First, BTC consolidates at high levels; Second, new funds flood in wildly. And now it’s more like a “local celebration.” Hotspot funds are rotating quickly, today AI, tomorrow PayFi, and the day after it might be MEME again. Why is this happening? Because the international situation is creating volatility. The US-Iran issue keeps funds cautious, while Trump’s visit to China makes the market start to imagine “global risk easing.” So funds enter a typical state: Saying cautious on the surface, but aggressively opening longs in practice. The three sectors I am most optimistic about right now are: PayFi, AI Agents, and RWA. PayFi has application stories, AI has traffic, RWA has institutional expectations. These three directions are likely to be rotated in and out of hype. My trading approach is also very simple: 70% mainstream coins for defense, 20% hotspot rotation, 10% reserved for “emotion lottery.” Because in a bull market, the most important thing is not to earn the fastest, but to survive the longest. Those who can truly cycle through the market are never the most aggressive, but the ones who can best control their hands. #山寨币资金回流
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GasFeeNightmare

GasFeeNightmare

8 minutes ago
I just came across a pretty shocking story. A 35-year-old programmer went through the darkest week of his life in the crypto world—nearly 10 million yuan in assets almost vanished in just 3 days. He took leave from work, couldn’t sleep every day, and could only eat under his wife’s forced insistence. Staring at his phone screen, he watched Luna tumble from $50, $20, $1 all the way down to $0.00000112… This “star coin,” once ranked No. 4 by market cap, created countless people’s wealth dreams in 2021, yet in just a few days, the numbers across all accounts evaporated. Behind it is a very interesting mechanism. Luna and UST are a pair of twin brothers, kept in balance through algorithmic design. UST is a stablecoin with no asset collateral at all; it maintains the $1 price by relying on a two-way minting and burning relationship with Luna. As long as Luna holds its value, UST can remain stable; once Luna collapses, the entire ecosystem falls into an irreversible death spiral. On May 8, big institutions began deliberately dumping UST, breaking the supply-and-demand balance. UST decoupled from the dollar. People, in panic, exchanged UST for Luna, causing Luna to surge and its price to plunge. Once this deadly death spiral starts, it can never be stopped. Some say algorithmic stablecoins are basically a “step on the right foot with the left foot” kind of game—inflate a big bubble, and the moment it’s touched, it bursts. What’s interesting is that during the crisis, some people still made a fortune. Those shorting, those trying to pick bottoms, and those doing brick-arbitrage across exchanges—all of them profited handsomely from this crash. A young man in Guangzhou who did wholesale women’s clothing noticed on-chain Luna kept being minted and decided to short it. In the end, he made $40,000. Others also profited by trading the price differences between exchanges, turning $2,000 into 25 million yuan. The ones who lose money are “eight,” the ones who make money are “two”—and this rule still holds in the crypto world. But for those who were deeply involved, this crash meant a complete loss of confidence. That programmer used to be a die-hard fan of the Terra ecosystem. He even took part in efforts to save Terra, putting up 30,000 UST to buy derivatives that had been liquidated, trying to slow down the sell pressure. But all of it was just pouring water into a sieve. When the new Luna launched on May 28, the old holders’ reaction was immediate selling. No one believed in the project anymore. Looking back afterward, many people realized that algorithmic stablecoins might be a false proposition in the first place. If traditional finance hasn’t solved the death spiral problem yet, how could blockchain possibly solve it? Later, that programmer gained a deeper understanding of what a Ponzi scheme is—most blockchain projects have used Ponzi-style designs, which can only be used as short-term growth tools, and ultimately they must find a stable, non-Ponzi profit model. Terra failed to find one. Most ironically, after Luna surged over 1,000 times from the bottom, it attracted another batch of investors from outside the circle to jump in. Someone spent $80 to buy more than 200,000 Luna, fantasizing that it would rise back to $120. But when she realized there was no further upside for the old Luna, which had been renamed Lunc and handed over for community management, she finally understood she had been trapped. The market maker would never choose a coin like this—one that’s already so heavily shorted—to pull the price up; once it starts rising, people will dump, and the price can’t be pushed any higher. When rationality returns, the wealth-making bubble gets punctured instantly.
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