TradingKey - The global financial architecture is undergoing a structural realignment as Coinbase (COIN) aggressively bridges the chasm between decentralized protocols and traditional banking. Moving into early 2026, the firm has successfully pivoted from a pure-play cryptocurrency exchange to a diversified financial powerhouse. This transformation is driven by a strategic institutional partnership with Standard Chartered, an ambitious “Everything Exchange” roadmap, and a relentless legislative push in Washington to codify digital asset market structures.
A cornerstone of this evolution is the expanded partnership between Coinbase and Standard Chartered. Building on their successful SGD connectivity in Singapore, the two entities announced in December 2025 a global expansion to develop institutional-grade digital asset solutions.
The collaboration leverages Standard Chartered’s global footprint to develop prime services, including trade execution, custody, staking, and lending. Unlike retail products, this initiative targets hedge funds and asset managers requiring the highest compliance standards. A key differentiator is the “settlement flexibility” model, which enables clients to trade against Coinbase’s deep liquidity while maintaining assets with their preferred custodian — including Standard Chartered itself. As of February 2026, Coinbase Business is scaling these infrastructures to support crypto-native startups and enterprises with fully regulated operating accounts.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong continues to challenge the legacy financial system, describing traditional finance as "broken" and exclusionary for younger generations. To address this, Coinbase is executing its 2026 roadmap to become a global "Everything App" — a direct challenge to incumbents like Robinhood.
A major milestone reached in January 2026 was the expansion of Coinbase’s prediction markets to all 50 U.S. states through its partnership with Kalshi. Users can now trade on real-world outcomes — from Federal Reserve decisions to global sporting events — directly using USD or USDC. Simultaneously, the firm has expanded 24/7 trading of global stocks and ETFs for its European and international clients, powered by the transparency of blockchain technology.
"Younger people feel locked out of the old wealth ladder," Armstrong noted. By integrating stocks, crypto, and prediction markets into a single interface, Coinbase is capturing a generation that allocates three times more to alternative assets than older cohorts. The firm remains on track to launch 24/7 perpetuals in H1 2026, allowing high-leverage trading on both crypto and global equities.
The acceleration of these products occurs against a backdrop of intense lobbying in Washington. In February 2026, Brian Armstrong is leading a renewed push for the "Digital Asset Market Structure Clarity Act" (the CLARITY Act). This bipartisan legislation aims to establish a definitive federal framework for digital assets, potentially preempting fragmented state-level rules like California’s DFAL.
Armstrong’s strategy centers on elevating stablecoins — specifically USDC — into a daily financial utility. By scaling on-chain payments via the Base Layer-2 network, Coinbase is building a crypto-native banking layer designed for cross-border settlements that bypass the "scary and primitive" technology of traditional banking.
Despite its expansion, Coinbase faces ongoing legal hurdles. A Coinbase class action lawsuit alleges that the company and top executives, including Brian Armstrong and CFO Alesia Haas, misled investors regarding internal data breaches and security failures.
The Coinbase lawsuit centers on claims of "late disclosure" regarding a significant data breach involving insider misconduct from 2024. Furthermore, the suit highlights regulatory breaches at its UK subsidiary, CB Payments Ltd (CBPL), which was fined for failing to monitor high-risk customers. These governance questions are compounded by Coinbase’s "remote-first" model, which critics in the Coinbase class action lawsuit argue contributes to transparency and oversight failures.
Since the Coinbase IPO date in April 2021, the stock has been a bellwether for the digital economy. Today, February 12, 2026, serves as a critical junction as the company prepares to release its Q4 and Full-Year 2025 financial results after the bell.
As of 2:35 p.m. ET, COIN is trading at $153.20 (down 5.7%), following a volatile session. The stock hit a daily low of $148.85 after JPMorgan (JPM) analyst Ken Worthington slashed his price target on the stock to $290 (down from $399), citing decelerating growth in USDC and softening crypto prices. Despite this "price reset" from 2025 record highs, Coinbase remains the essential gateway for institutional capital; the IBIT and other spot ETFs remain deeply integrated with its industry-leading custody and execution infrastructure.