Coinbase shrugs off SEC probe and security scares—bulls say ’buy the dip’
Wall Street’s favorite crypto punching bag takes another hit—and keeps on ticking. The SEC’s latest probe and a minor security breach barely dented Coinbase’s armor, with trading volumes actually climbing 12% post-news. Here’s why the ’regulated rebel’ won’t be unseated anytime soon.
Growth engines still firing: Institutional inflows hit $1.2B last quarter despite regulatory saber-rattling. Retail traders? Still stacking sats like it’s 2021. The exchange’s staking products now yield more than your bank’s ’high-interest’ savings account (which pays 0.5% if you’re lucky).
Security theater? The ’breach’ turned out to be a third-party vendor email hack—no customer funds touched. Meanwhile, Coinbase’s cold storage still holds more BTC than some national treasuries. Try that with your Robinhood account.
Bottom line: Regulators keep swinging, crypto keeps growing. The real threat isn’t SEC paperwork—it’s legacy finance dinosaurs still pretending blockchain is a ’fad’ while their own stablecoins implode. Your move, Jamie Dimon.
SEC probe
Adding to the company’s woes, the same day brought fresh revelations that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether Coinbase misled investors by overstating its user count in past filings.
The probe, first reported by The New York Times, centers around Coinbase’s claim in its 2021 IPO materials that it had over 100 million "verified users," a figure the company continued to tout in marketing through 2022.
Coinbase has since retired the metric, saying in a 2023 filing that it was not a reliable indicator of performance.
The company noted that some users may have created multiple accounts and that the stat included anyone who verified an email or phone number.
Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal described the probe as a “holdover” from the prior administration.
"While we strongly believe this investigation should not continue, we remain committed to working with the SEC to bring this matter to a close,” he added.
The renewed scrutiny comes shortly after the SEC dropped a lawsuit accusing Coinbase of illegal token sales, signaling a thaw in regulatory hostility under a more crypto-friendly SEC chair and government administration.
Coinbase repeatedly sparred with the previous SEC administration under Gary Gensler, criticizing its approach to digital assets as inconsistent and overly aggressive.
The exchange has also been investigated by the SEC over how it generates USDC revenue and its relationship with the stablecoin’s issuer, Circle, a matter Grewal said had been “fully resolved” in a statement last in April.
The same month, the state of Oregon also filed a lawsuit against Coinbase, alleging the exchange violated state securities law.
What the experts think
Still, experts say the probe may not materially impact Coinbase’s long-term trajectory. "Plenty of firms have faced similar cases like these and lived to fight another day," said Nick Cote, co-founder and CEO of Secondlane.
He compared the situation to Facebook’s $100 million SEC fine in 2019 and Twitter’s $800 million class settlement in 2024.
Legal expert Jack Graves, a professor of law at Syracuse University, believes that Coinbase’s S&P 500 inclusion likely wouldn’t have occurred if the SEC probe posed serious threats.
"I think the data breach is more significant, especially when you consider the history of this industry," he said. "However, if there is more to the SEC investigation than is presented here, I might change my mind."
Other crypto insiders were even more dismissive.
Peter Chung of Presto Labs called the Times report a “hit piece,” telling Decrypt that crypto is a new industry and therefore, the best practice on what a reliable metric for crypto exchange users is not firmly established.
“It appears Coinbase has voluntarily changed the reported metric after realizing that the initial figure is misleading, he said. "This is not enough to argue that they were acting in bad faith and deserve to be penalized by the market."
Coinbase maintains that the metric in question was fully disclosed and appropriately contextualized in its filings, and that it shifted focus to more meaningful indicators like monthly transacting users beginning in 2023.
The company characterized the probe to Decrypt as a legacy matter from the prior SEC administration and said it continues to cooperate with regulators.
Edited by Sebastian Sinclair