Coinbase – Pros and Cons
Always important to look at both sides of any issue
Why Coinbase’s stellar earnings are not what they seem
It’s easy to be profitable if your real unique selling point is being a beneficiary of regulatory arbitrage.
FT Alphaville- Izabella Kaminska APRIL 8 2021
Coinbase, one of the most popular crypto exchange and wallet services operating in the regulated financial sector, shared its first-quarter earnings on Tuesday ahead of its Nasdaq direct listing on April 14.
Top line results showed revenues sky rocketing to $1.8bn in the first quarter of 2021 versus $191m in the same period last year, with net income climbing to c$730m.
Other stand out numbers included the service reaching 56m verified users, trading volume of $335bn, and its $223bn worth of assets, setting the crypto service up for a valuation of up to $70bn.
Twitter folk quickly forged a consensus that such figures prove not only that Delaware-incorporated company is a profit-minting machine but that crypto itself can no longer be ignored by traditional finance.
As John Street Capital tweeted in an illuminating
Twitter thread:
But it’s worth reminding investors that the stand out concern remains that the current framework under which Coinbase is regulated (a money transmission one) is not at all suited to regulating its broader activities, among them its exchange activity and principal-trading operations.
This is important because if Coinbase’s regulatory status were to change (and regulatory ambiguity is clocked in the company’s S1 risk factors) the company could be forced to drop many of these hugely profitable activities or be forced to operate at a much higher capital cost.
In an upcoming qualitative review of the regulatory status of 16 crypto exchanges Martin Walker, director at the centre for evidence based management and a fintech consultant, and co-author Winnie Mosioma, the founder of the Blockchain Legal Consultancy, argue that these sorts of inconsistencies will have to be closed if these platforms are to compete in the formal financial sector:
“Conventional platforms for trading securities, foreign exchange, derivatives, commodities and other more conventional financial assets are strictly regulated, whether they are officially classified as exchanges or Alternative Trading Systems (ATS). An ATS, while not strictly a stock exchange, has to follow the regulations that apply to either exchanges or broker-dealers depending on a number criteria (varying between jurisdictions), such as the volume of trades and market share. Whatever the classification, conventional trading platforms have to follow strict rules designed to protect investors and avoid destabilisation of the financial system. Particularly rules that require a high level of transparency guaranteeing operational resilience.”
The context, they note, is cryptocurrency’s inherent dependency on multilateral exchanges for facilitating price discovery. This contrasts to bitcoin predecessors such as Liberty Reserve or E-gold, which only needed to be serviced by third parties prepared to exchange digital currencies for the corresponding linked assets for a fee.
Since crypto regulations have largely failed to address this dependency, this has led to a patchwork of conflicting regulatory approaches, many of which entirely ignore any corresponding trading activity or facilitation.
A case in point is that seven of the most prominent US exchanges, including Coinbase, operate as licensed Money Service Businesses (MSBs) or equivalent. This classification ensures the platforms must be registered with the financial crimes enforcement network (FinCEN) in the US, and/or the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK, but it does not mean their trading activities are supervised in any formal manner.
As the authors note:
“Given the lack of significant regulatory oversight of actual trading activity it is probably no surprise many cryptocurrency exchanges carry out questionable activities, such as offering leverage to their clients and wash trading, all against a context of unexplained system outages during times of market instability. Reasons for regulatory intervention in the conventional world. Few exercise any form of mitigation against market abuse, while some have even been accused of trading against their clients in what economist Nouriel Roubini has compared to a casino dealer betting against a gambler whose cards they have seen.”
Coinbase may be a hugely profitable business, but it may also be a uniquely risky one relative to regulated trading venues such as the CME or ICE, neither of which are allowed to take principal positions to facilitate liquidity on their platforms. Instead, they rely on third party liquidity providers.
Coinbase, however, is not only known to match client transactions on an internalised “offchain” basis (that is, not via the primary blockchain) but also to square-off residual unmatched positions via bilateral relationships in crypto over-the-counter markets, where it happens to have established itself as a prominent market maker. It’s an ironic state of affairs because the netting processes that are at the heart of this system expose Coinbase to the very same risks that real-time gross settlement systems (such as bitcoin) were meant to vanquish.
According to its S1 filing, up to 11 per cent of the company’s revenue was sourced from other revenue which includes the sale of crypto assets where Coinbase itself is the principal in the transaction.
As the document explains (our emphasis):
“Periodically, as an accommodation to customers, we may fulfil customer transactions using our own crypto assets. We fulfil customer accommodation transactions using our own assets for orders that do not meet the minimum trade size for execution on our platform or to maintain customers’ trade execution and processing times during unanticipated system disruptions. We have custody and control of these crypto assets prior to the sale to the customer and record revenue at the point in time when the sale is processed. Accordingly, we record the total value of the sale as revenue and the cost of the crypto asset in other operating expense.”
The 11 per cent figure might sound like a small amount, especially given the cost of capital necessary to facilitate it, but its impact on broader profitability is likely to be far more wide reaching, given that liquidity breeds liquidity.
Craig Pirrong, a professor at the University of Houston and established expert on commodity and exchange regulation, agreed that Coinbase’s principal-based activities make comparisons with conventional exchanges redundant.
As he noted to FT Alphaville on Wednesday:
“CME and ICE are neutral many-to-many platforms that do not take positions. Coinbase is a market making entity that does take positions, and hence incurs substantial risks that exchanges do not. Comparing the financial performance of such an entity to CME without taking the substantially different risk profile into account is completely offbase. CME is like the hardware store selling shovels to the prospectors: Coinbase is more like the prospectors.”
The fact that by Coinbase’s own admission “judgment is required in determining whether the Company is the principal or the agent in transactions between customers” speaks volumes about the potential conflicts at hand.
Coinbase downplays these risks by stating it does not bear inventory risk from its principal trading activities because it is “not responsible for the fulfilment of any crypto asset”. But that can also be interpreted to mean that Coinbase only engages as a counterparty with its own customers when it pays for them to do so, undermining the argument that its principal trading activity is always in the interests of its clients.
A last point of concern is that Coinbase readily admits in its S1 to engaging in prime-broker type activities, for which it is also not regulated, notably by offering credit-based products and services to institutional customers and post-trade credit. In particular, it notes:
“We introduced post-trade credit whereby we advance funds and settle on behalf of credit eligible customers, removing a key point of friction by allowing customers to instantly trade on credit and settle within a few days.”
Again, this is not the sort of activity a conventional exchange would be allowed to engage in due to conflict of interest reasons. Indeed, one need only to read Michael Lewis’ Flash Boys to understand how such asymmetries might upset buyside operators in the long run.
What’s more, when you consider the bitcoin economy was forged through the sweat of crypto-promoters claiming the standing system is not to be trusted because it is underpinned by evil credit-based transactions . . . again, it all feels a little too ironic. Don’t you think?
Coinbase did not reply to our questions, and we will update the post if they do.
Coinbase's direct IPO could be hard act to follow
High name recognition and strong investor interest are needed to go public when there’s no big underwriter or a road show to generate excitement, a capital raise specialist says.
AUTHOR Robert Freedman
The decision by digital currency exchange Coinbase to structure its IPO next week as a direct listing is generating interest among finance professionals. But the move probably holds few lessons for other companies, since most are unlikely to match Coinbase's high profile and the investment interest it's generating, Baker Botts attorney Sam Dibble said.
To succeed in a direct listing, in which the company offers its shares without the help of a Wall Street underwriter or a road show to drum up interest, the company needs the resources and name recognition to attract investors on its own, said Dibble, a partner at the firm and a specialist in capital raising and mergers
"You really do have to have your own marketing machine in force," he said. "It really is just like a wind-it-up-and-go on the first day of trading, [given the] supply and demand element. And once the genie's out of the bottle, you never know what's going to happen to the stock prices."
In a traditional IPO, a company works with investment banks and a lead underwriter to price the initial offering and generate interest among investors.
Direct listings are one of several structures the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in recent years has tinkered with to encourage more startups to consider IPOs after years of dwindling interest. Many startups today prefer to stay private, working with long-time investors who can also provide technical assistance. They may delay going public until much later in their lifecycle, when much of their fastest growth — along with the value appreciation that goes with it — is behind them.
Auctions and special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) are other IPO alternatives. These structures have been available for decades, but the SEC has been easing rules more recently to boost public offerings. Direct listings, for example, were previously limited to companies that wanted to let existing investors sell shares; that changed last year, when the SEC said companies could sell new shares alongside existing shares.
In Coinbase's case, the company is expected to focus on liquidating its investors notwithstanding the rule change.
"I don't believe they need the new capital," said Dibble. Instead, the company sees this as an exit for the money that financed its early-stage growth, without having to spend on underwriting and other fees that go to Wall Street banks.
Spotify and Slack are two other companies in recent years that took a direct approach and, like Coinbase, had the name recognition and investor interest to go out on their own.
"Those were up-and-coming companies, then unicorns with really high valuations, and were generating not only revenue but a little bit of profit as well through their operations," he said. "It's a tricky thing to round up enough demand for the stock you're trying to make a market in."
Surging market
Coinbase's profile and revenue have risen along with the cryptocurrency industry, led by Bitcoin, which has attracted global investor interest. Bitcoin was trading at around $500 a decade ago; today, it's hovering around $57,000.
"Coinbase will provide an avenue for companies to make an indirect bet on cryptocurrencies," he said. "Most if not all of the ... financial players really have been on the sidelines. One way for these companies to put their toe in the water is to take a position in Coinbase, whose fortunes are directly related to the value and appreciation, if any, of Bitcoin and other currencies down the line."
CFOs in recent surveys have overwhelmingly said they have no plans to accept or hold cryptocurrencies despite a few high-profile companies, led by Tesla, saying they would. But they might very well hold an interest in Coinbase.
Competition
The IPO appears to come at a good time for Coinbase. Access to public markets can help it roll up some of the other cryptocurrency exchanges that have cropped up to leverage the boom in interest.
"Just an enormous number of companies are running some form of exchange," said Dibble, a partner in the firm's San Francisco office. "I think at one point, and it's probably still the case, there were more exchanges than cryptocurrencies. So, the market is just completely ready for consolidation, and Coinbase's ability to do that rollup will give them an incredible advantage."
The company will need that advantage, because it's at a disadvantage in other ways, Dibble said. Many exchanges outside the U.S. don't play the same role as Coinbase in differentiating between tokens and currencies that meet the definition of a security. That distinction changes their regulatory treatment and raises issues for both the trading and the custodial functions of an exchange.
"Coinbase does this analysis to try to determine whether the one they're doing is going to involve the listing of coins they believe are securities as opposed to something that's exempt from that categorization under SEC rules," he said. "There really isn't great clarity about that, to say the least."
Coinbase is effectively setting up a test that could be adopted by the SEC, Dibble believes.
In the meantime, the higher-level role it's adopted can give other exchanges an edge among investors who aren't interested in differentiating between the two.
"At some level, Coinbase is at a permanent handicap because they have to go through this process any time they want to consider adding a new coin to their database," he said. "So, by definition, there will be many more investment choices on an exchange that's less regulated, so whatever subset that Coinbase offers will certainly be available on, say, Binance [a popular Malta-based crypto exchange]. If you're looking for one-stop shopping and doing some Bitcoin or Ethereum but also some riskier, earlier-stage ones, you're going to probably consolidate everything with Binance. Playing that game of catchup is something that Coinbase is going to have to deal with."