Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong is aiming at one of the most entrenched frameworks in American finance, and he’s not holding back. His comments that quickly rippled through financial and crypto news circles.
I think it’s time to revisit the accredited investor laws in the US. Companies are staying private longer, where only accredited investors (aka rich people!) can invest. Retail investors can only come in after IPO, when much of the upside has already been captured. These rules…
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) June 16, 2026
Armstrong called the U.S. accredited investor system a “regressive tax” that locks ordinary Americans out of early-stage investment opportunities. While the wealthy get first access to the biggest gains. It’s become one of the most debated pieces of Coinbase news today, touching nerves well beyond the crypto world.
Why Armstrong Wants the Rules Revisited
Under current U.S. rules, qualifying as an accredited investor generally requires earning at least $200,000 annually, or $300,000 jointly. Conversely, holding a net worth above $1 million, excluding a primary residence. The original intent was protection: regulators assumed wealthier individuals were better equipped to handle complex, risky investments.
Armstrong argues that the world has changed and the rules haven’t kept up. Companies are staying private far longer than they used to. It means most of the value creation happens well before an IPO. By the time retail investors get access, much of the upside has already been captured by venture capital firms and accredited investors.
The numbers make his case starkly. More than 1,300 unicorn companies are collectively valued at roughly $6.4 trillion today. Ordinary investors largely watch from the sidelines while that wealth accumulates.
Two Alternatives on the Table
Armstrong floated two possible paths forward. The first would shift from wealth thresholds to a competency-based model. Essentially, a financial literacy exam that anyone could pass to gain accredited status, regardless of their income or net worth.
The second option is more sweeping: remove accredited investor restrictions entirely. At the same time, keep disclosure requirements and strong fraud enforcement in place. Under this model, adults would simply be trusted to decide how much risk they’re willing to take with their own money.
Supporters and Critics Weigh In
The reaction has been predictably split. Supporters point out the obvious irony. Americans can legally gamble large sums or speculate freely in public markets, yet can’t invest in a private startup. For them, the current system rewards wealth, not wisdom. Critics push back with equal conviction. Private investments fail at high rates and many financial professionals worry that removing protections could expose inexperienced investors to serious losses. That they’re not prepared for.
What It Means for Crypto and Financial Markets
For those following crypto news, Armstrong’s argument fits into a broader industry push to modernize regulations. That was built long before blockchain technology, tokenized assets and online investing platforms reshaped how markets work.
The accredited investor debate is unlikely to be resolved quickly. But the conversation Armstrong has ignited. About who gets to build wealth and at what stage is one that regulators, entrepreneurs and everyday investors will be wrestling with for some time. Coinbase putting its weight behind reform ensures the issue stays firmly in the spotlight.
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