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ARMSTRONG DIDN’T BACK DOWN -- HE DOUBLED DOWN On Bloomberg at Davos, Brian Armstrong explained why Coinbase pulled support for the Senate market structure bill. His issue was simple: the draft tilted too far toward banks. Bank lobbying groups were trying to limit stablecoin rewards, block tokenized equities, and...

161,042 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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🚨 Coinbase CEO Dumps $550m Of Stock Onto The Market As The Centralized Exchange Faces Potential Solvency Issues, With Customer Funds At Risk Coinbase has been desperately opposing the Clarity Act but why? Because it could get insolvent👇 The CLARITY Act targets stablecoin yield programs, cutting off one of Coinbase’s biggest revenue streams by restricting how platforms earn from customer deposits and interest, and forcing a shift toward fully regulated, lower-margin models. • White House crypto adviser stated crypto is “threatening to community banks, G-SIBs, and larger banks.” • Treasury Secretary Bessent called opponents of the CLARITY Act “recalcitrant actors.” • Coinbase reported a large quarterly loss: •EPS: -$2.49 vs $0.96 expected •Net loss: ~$667M • Coinbase CEO Dumps $550m Of Stock just a few months before these results came out. • Coinbase Support acknowledged users were unable to buy, sell, or transfer temporarily. • Coinbase is now charging $137 in fees for converting $5000 USDT to USD, while in the advanced trades it takes 2 cents. • Jeffrey Epstein has invested $3M into Coinbase (2014) at a ~$400M valuation, who saw Ripple as “an enemy.” The exchange could potentially face a “bank run” if issues escalate and funds on Coinbase would be at risk. This is exactly the reason why David Schwartz recently said that XRPL is the most decentralized ledger and helps people become their “own bank” by eliminating middlemen like banks and centralized exchanges.

Stern Drew

87,617 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Brian Armstrong on what he learned about management from Balaji Srinivasan “Balaji is a brilliant guy. He’s probably one of the top couple smartest people I’ve ever met in my life,” Brian begins. “He was briefly the Chief Technology Officer of Coinbase. He came in through an acquisition and did some amazing work. And he taught me how to manage a totally different type of person.” Brian continues: “Balaji is kind of unmanageable. He’s what some people might call a ‘free radical’ within an organization. He kind of bounces around, absorbing vast amounts of information — even things that aren’t his responsibility — and occasionally he would come back to me with these incredible insights.” Brian gives one funny example: “At one point he came back to me and said, ‘These are all the salespeople that are making more revenue than their salary, and these are all the people that are not.’ And the first thought I had was, ‘You’re not supposed to have access to anybody’s salary. How did you get that?’” Balaji replied, “Don’t worry about it. I found it in some database that I wasn’t supposed to have access to.” The next question Brian asked was, “How did you connect that all up?” The previous week Brian asked the data team to connect Salesforce to Coinbase’s salary data so they could start running some reports to have more accountability. But it was supposed to be a three-week project. Balaji responded, “Oh well I couldn’t sleep this weekend, and I just knew something felt off. So I had to code it up and put it all together.” When the data team completed their analysis three weeks later, they confirmed that Balaji was 100% right. “He was continually doing things like that,” Brian explains. “And he’s incredibly high in disagreeableness, which I learned from him as well. He would go into a team and ask, ‘Why isn’t this functioning well?’ And he would suffer no fools. He would not be afraid to go in there and turn half the people on a team — whether he had the permission to fire them or not… He was a very contrarian figure. I’d say about once a week someone would come into my office and say, ‘I can’t work with Balaji. He’s causing so much collateral damage.’ And I’d say, ‘Yes, but he’s also generating an enormous amount of value and I need you to learn how to work with him.’” Brian knew Balaji wasn’t going to last forever at Coinbase because it was incredibly disruptive, but ultimately he taught Brian how to be a “turnaround CEO” when needed: “In the past I was opting a little more toward trying to be liked instead of being clear about what we’re doing, where we’re going, and what the bar is. He helped me become a better CEO and have a little more disagreeableness.” Video source: Stripe (2025)

Startup Archive

474,256 görüntüleme • 10 ay önce

🚨 THIS IS BIG. CONNECT THE DOTS. 🚨 After speaking at the World Economic Forum, Donald Trump said he looks forward to signing the Market Structure Bill to unlock financial freedom for Americans, or China will dominate this market. Then the White House Crypto Czar David Sacks confirms it: "Once market structure legislation passes, banks will get fully into crypto… They’ll be deep in the stablecoin business to offer yield and stay competitive." Here’s what most people are missing 👇 This is NOT Banks vs Crypto. It’s Centralized Middlemen vs Decentralized Access. What the bill actually unlocks: ▫️ Community banks & credit unions onboarding digital assets ▫️ Regulated on-ramps into DeFi ▫️ Stablecoin yield earned on-chain, not parked on centralized exchanges ▫️ Capital in motion, not idle custodial yield Credit unions don’t have shareholders. They’re owned by the people. That means: ▫️ Higher yields ▫️ Lower fees ▫️ Direct access to DeFi ▫️ No need to trust a centralized exchange acting like a bank Meanwhile, some centralized exchanges are pretending to fight banks… while quietly partnering with big banks and recreating the same old system. ⚠️ If you’re earning 3–4% on a centralized exchange, wait until community banks + DeFi rails go live. This is mainstream integration, but done the right way. The rails are being laid. The gatekeepers are losing control. Know What You Hold!

Echo 𝕏

167,836 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Scott Jennings called Border Czar Tom Homan’s press conference earlier today a “master class.” As Scott Jennings explained, it was a brilliant move by the president because it allowed the administration to lower the temperature publicly — without changing the substance of the operation itself. Homan was able to project calm and cooperation, while still making clear that enforcement hasn’t stopped. JENNINGS: “Yeah, I thought Homan’s press conference this morning was a master class, and it’s obvious that the president made a smart decision in sending him there to reset this situation.” “I think the president, no president, wants to see chaos in any city for any reason. I mean, that’s not good for the country. It’s not good for a presidency. Homan has clearly already made a huge difference.” “He met with the local officials. This agreement that he has, apparently with the attorney general, Ellison, about working to Elie’s point with the county jails, that’s one of the things the White House has been asking for is some cooperation at the jails.” “This is clearly a step in the right direction.” “But as you pointed out, Abby, he’s still very much an immigration hardliner.” “And even though they are going to prioritize people who have other criminal issues, he said, if you’re in the country illegally, you’re never off the table.” “He was also signaling to the president’s supporters that, listen, we’re not backing down on the president’s priorities on illegal immigration.” “He also said today that he was very much aware of these organizations that are going on these Signal groups, these Whatsapp groups that are trying to organize the impeding of federal law enforcement.” “And he said he was very much looking into that.” “If you believe that having less chaos and more efficiency in government and more cooperation is good, today was clearly a great day.”

Overton

59,647 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Goldman Sachs CEO: Tokenized equities is something we’re thinking a lot about David Solomon asks Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong how he sees tokenized equities unfolding. Brian responds: “A few years ago, people were talking about stablecoins, and they were saying, ‘Why do we need a digital dollar? We kind of can already make digital payments… What’s the point of that?’ It turned out to be a massive market. There’s high demand for the dollar in all these countries around the world, and a lot of people can’t get access to dollar-denominated accounts — they live in a high-inflation country like Turkey or Argentina or Nigeria. So that was one piece. And the other was it just reduced friction in terms of all kinds of payments people wanted to make in crypto for trading and B2B payments. There’s something like $30 trillion of stablecoin payment volume in the last year.” Brian believes tokenized equities will follow a similar path: “We don’t know exactly how it’s going to play out, but if you simply store a share of a company with a traditional custodian and issue a token equivalent of it on-chain, what does that enable? Similar to stablecoins, there’s an international component to this. There’s lots of people in the world who would love to buy Tesla or Nvidia. If you’re wealthy in Argentina, you can probably get a brokerage account open somewhere to trade that kind of stuff, but the vast majority of people cannot. There’s also this 24/7 trading aspect — people want to do that, and I think crypto is going to get there faster. There’s fractional shares, where you can trade a tiny piece of a share. There’s things like perpetual futures markets which have done really well in crypto — why shouldn’t that exist for securities as well? I think you’re going to see some things like this where crypto reduces friction and allows people to try new things. There might even be novel governance things which get created: let’s say you want to create a stock where short-term holders of your stock can’t vote — you can program that into a smart contract on chain and make that new type of token with those capabilities.” And it’s not just equities. Treasuries, private credit, real estate, and many other real world assets (RWAs) are being tokenized, with Ethereum is the preferred settlement rail for compliant institutional capital markets. More than 60% of all tokenized assets — over $200 billion — reside on Ethereum.

Etherealize

86,209 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

The deeper concern, Bannon explained, is that Americans remain largely unaware of the global forces pulling them toward war. While the media focuses on domestic distractions, decisions are being made abroad that could change the course of history. “People are not awake of what is happening throughout the world and how we're being sucked in and supposedly by somebody we support, like Zelenskyy,” he said. The fact that Ukraine allegedly launched such a provocative strike without consulting Washington was, in Bannon’s words, “outrageous.” He doubled down on the danger of continuing to back a foreign leader who’s now acting unilaterally, without American oversight or input. “To know that he never gave the White House heads up. He never asked permission to do this.” Adding fuel to the fire, Senator Lindsey Graham was in Ukraine the same weekend, publicly reaffirming U.S. support. That, according to Bannon, is only making things worse. “It's outrageous! And Lindsey Graham all weekend's over there stirring the pot—We can’t have people over there telling Ukrainians that we're going back more.” In contrast, Bannon said, Donald Trump is trying to de-escalate. “What we try do is calm this down. What President Trump is trying to say is like, look, let's get to a cease-fire. Let's put our weapons down. Let's talk peace and prosperity.” Even if there’s disagreement on the economics, Trump views a negotiated settlement as the only realistic way forward. “We don't support the economic deal. But President Trump is saying that he needs it as a central part of a peace plan.” Still, none of that matters, Bannon warned, if others are charging forward recklessly. “We can't have Lindsey Graham and particularly Zelenskyy leading us into a 3rd World War with a deep strike into Russia.” And Vladimir Putin, he said, is already responding. “And Putin came back today and said, hey, we're gonna get to the bottom of this and we're going to see who is accountable in Ukraine and beyond. And that was a message to the United States.”

The Vigilant Fox 🦊

256,192 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Last week, Mastercard, Visa, Ripple & Coinbase 🛡️ all shipped payment rails for AI agents. Every one of them reached for stablecoins Instead of traditional cards. A choice that is the whole story 👇🏻 ◢ An unpriced problem Card networks are built around a human pressing approve. One purchase, one confirmation, a fee that only makes sense above a certain size. Agents don’t work like that. They pay continuously, programmatically, often in fractions of a cent, for things like an API call or a second of compute. A bot paying $0.004 a thousand times an hour is a transaction pattern the card model physically can’t process at a profit. The rails we built for people don’t fit the machines. ◢ Four giants, one answer On june 3 mastercard opened card settlement in stablecoins across eight chains. On june 10 it launched Agent Pay for Machines, letting agents settle in stablecoins with permissions recorded onchain. The same day, ripple shipped a toolkit putting RLUSD and the x402 standard under agent payments, visa announced an agentic commerce tie-up with openai, and coinbase switched on agentic trading. Four of the biggest names in payments moved in a single week and all landed on the same primitive. ◢ Why it had to be stablecoins Strip out the branding and the requirements are mechanical. The money has to be programmable, so code can hold and move it without a bank in the loop. It has to clear sub-cent payments, which card fees make impossible. It also has to settle in seconds with finality, because that’s the speed agents run at. And it has to be always on, because machines don’t take weekends. A dollar in a bank account fails most of those, while a dollar as a stablecoin passes all of them. ◢ Conclusive Insights For years stablecoins were pitched at consumers who already had working banks and mostly didn’t bite. The adoption story kept underdelivering because the product was aimed at the wrong buyer. The agent economy doesn’t have that problem. It has no legacy banking relationship, no human patience, and no other option that clears at machine speed. The demand that stablecoins were always promised is finally showing up, but not from the customer everyone expected. My take: the entire stablecoin debate was framed around human payments, which is why it kept stalling.

Onur 🍌🦍

13,595 görüntüleme • 29 gün önce

Brian Armstrong shares the Y Combinator advice that helped Coinbase find product/market fit “The first version of a product you put out doesn’t work. In fact, that’s the only thing I’ve ever seen happen in startups. I’ve never seen a startup where the first version of their product actually worked. Sometimes in hindsight people like to tell that story, but I think in reality it’s very rare.” The first version of Coinbase was a hosted Bitcoin wallet. Brian posted it to Reddit and a few people signed up but nobody stuck around. Rather than get discouraged though, he recalled the advice he got at Y Combinator: “Don’t spend your time going to conferences and trying to raise money. If you don’t have product/market fit yet, talk to your customers and improve the product based on their feedback… There’s really only two things you should be doing in the early stage - talking to your customers and improving the product. It sounds like simple advice, but people spend so much time doing other stuff that’s not actually real work.” Following that advice, Brian emailed 10 of the people who had signed up for Coinbase and asked if they’d be open to a quick phone call. One of the users liked the wallet but didn’t have any Bitcoin. Brian asked him: “If there was an easy way to get Bitcoin into your wallet - like a buy button or something - would you have stuck around and used it?” “Yeah, probably” replied the user. So Brian spent the next few months securing bank partnerships and money transmission licenses so he could build a simple buy button into the app. Then he launched it. “The minute we launched that buy button, it started to grow every day organically with no marketing or anything. And that was the minute I felt like we finally had product/market fit.” Video source: Steven Bartlett (2022)

Startup Archive

78,532 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce