William Blair: Coinbase selloff “de‑risks” stock as booming USDC adoption turbocharges outlook A sharp pullback in Coinbase shares has, paradoxically, made the exchange a cleaner investment case, according to research from William Blair. The investment bank says the roughly 26% decline from first‑quarter highs has “largely de‑risked” the stock by pricing in weaker spot and derivatives trading volumes — leaving investors to focus on faster‑growing, higher‑margin revenue streams. Why the reset matters William Blair argues the selloff already reflects soft trading activity in early 2026, so downside from muted markets is less likely to surprise. Meanwhile, the firm calls Coinbase “the best way to participate in crypto’s market‑share gains versus the fiat economy,” given the company’s ongoing shift from a pure spot exchange into a full‑service trading platform. How Coinbase is changing its revenue mix Coinbase is expanding beyond trading fees into derivatives, staking, DEX aggregation, 24/7 stock trading, prediction markets and its Base L2 infrastructure. That transition is reshaping revenue: Coinbase’s Q3 2025 shareholder letter put subscription and services revenue (including stablecoin income) in a $710–$790 million quarterly range, and outside estimates now suggest trading fees account for less than half of total revenue. In short, the business is getting less dependent on volatile spot volume. USDC is the big catalyst William Blair is most bullish about USD Coin (USDC). The note estimates USDC’s share of the dollar‑pegged stablecoin market rose to about 27% in Q1 2026 from roughly 21% in 2024, narrowing the gap with Tether’s USDT. Exchange supply data from KuCoin and CEX.IO indicate USDC supply has surged roughly 220% since late 2023 to about $78–$81 billion, helping push total stablecoin capitalization to a record $315 billion in Q1 2026. Stablecoins now account for roughly 75% of on‑chain trading volume, William Blair notes. Direct earnings impact That stablecoin growth is already material to Coinbase’s bottom line. Bloomberg Intelligence estimates the exchange generated about $1.35 billion in USDC‑related revenue in 2025 — roughly 19% of total revenue — from reserve interest and fees. Research outlets FinanceFeeds and CCN estimate USDC‑related income could grow two‑ to seven‑fold if USDC‑based payments and B2B settlement rails scale further. Strategic alignment with Circle Coinbase holds a significant minority stake in USDC issuer Circle and splits global reserve income 50/50, a setup William Blair describes as “powerful economic alignment.” The bank previously highlighted Circle’s positioning for USDC commercialization — pointing to moves like Visa settling some U.S. card flows in USDC and new integrations with Intuit and enterprise software — which should broaden USDC use cases into merchant payments, payroll, on‑chain treasuries and tokenized real‑world assets. What it means for investors William Blair assigns a low probability to a prolonged crypto winter and frames Coinbase as an “asymmetric upside” bet: if markets stay muted, recurring subscription and stablecoin revenue provide a steadier, higher‑margin base; if crypto volumes rebound, that upside compounds an already improving earnings foundation. In the bank’s view, USDC’s climb from about one‑fifth to more than a quarter of the stablecoin market is not just plumbing — it’s central to Coinbase’s long‑term equity story. Bottom line: the recent selloff may have removed some tail risk, while accelerating USDC adoption and a broader product mix give Coinbase a clearer path to less cyclical, higher‑margin growth. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news

