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Coinbase Sets Direct Listing Reference Price At $250/Share, Valuing the Company At As Much As $65 Billion (techcrunch.com) 81

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Coinbase, the American cryptocurrency trading giant, has set a reference price for its direct listing at $250 per share. According to the company's most recent SEC filing, it has a fully diluted share count of 261.3 million, giving the company a valuation of $65.3 billion. Using a simple share count of 196,760,122 provided in its most recent S-1/A filing, Coinbase would be worth a slimmer $49.2 billion. Regardless of which share count is used to calculate the company's valuation, its new worth is miles above its final private price set in 2018 when the company was worth $8 billion. Around four years ago in 2017 Coinbase was worth just $1.6 billion, according to Crunchbase data. For investors in that round, let alone its earlier fundraises, the valuation implied by a $250 per-share price represents a multiple of around 40x from the price that they paid. "The Coinbase direct listing was turbocharged recently when the company provided a first-look at its Q1 2021 performance," adds TechCrunch. "As TechCrunch reported at the time, the company's recent growth was impressive, with revenue scaling from $585.1 million in Q4 2020, to $1.8 billion in the first three months of this year. The new numbers set an already-hot company's public debut on fire."
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Coinbase Sets Direct Listing Reference Price At $250/Share, Valuing the Company At As Much As $65 Billion

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  • That is bonkers. (Score:4, Informative)

    by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @09:19AM (#61271816)
    As mentioned on CNBC yesterday, that gives it a valuation about the same as Intercontinental Exchange ICE [yahoo.com], which is the company that owns the New York Stock Exchange. And pays a dividend, BTW.
    • In every story read about bitcoin over the past ten years or so, every one mentions that there's nothing to stop it from collapsing yet it gets bigger and bigger. When/If it eventually goes flat it's going to be a real mess.
      • Re:That is bonkers. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @09:41AM (#61271872)
        I question how much it would matter, because cryptocurrency doesn't interact with the actual economy much. It's hardly used to buy anything so rises and falls in its notional value don't really affect anybody's buying power. Nobody's 401k has a large dependence on cryptocurrencies. Contrast this with housing, the trigger of the 2008 "great recession." Housing is a massive fraction of the average person's monthly expenditures and of bank's income.
        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          There is an absolutely massive real economy in bitcoin in China. It's one of the handful of remaining tools of Chinese rich and middle class of getting money out of China now that Hong Kong insurance scam path got slammed shut, any hopes of another refloating of yuan are dead and cash mules are cracked down on hard.

          Its collapse would likely cause massive ripples in every sector with significant links to Chinese private investment. Including real estate across large Western nations' cities, which has been pu

          • Oh, I'm sure there will be ripples from a splash this size. It's not just the bitcoin itself but all the companies who are buying/selling/trading it. Maybe the scam was to let China buy in on it and then at the appropriate time pull the rug out from under them. Or are they too smart for that?
            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              That would be the reference to real economy, yes. And it's not like "China can pull the rug from under them" with this, because this isn't "China's money" but "Chinese money". While CCP insists in its propaganda that people and Party are inseparable, reality tends to disagree rather bluntly, and the whole "get your money out of China if you can" trend over last decade is a very good example of it.

              The problem isn't that apartments, agricultural fields, industries etc. will somehow magically be moved to China

          • by cusco ( 717999 )

            Historically China has had a period of social and economic chaos every couple of generations for the last 5,000 years. If that happens they'll get back up, dust themselves off, and go on being China. The Western countries do not have such a good history of recovering from economic collapse.

            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              Sure. It's just that "chaos" takes a few generations in the best case scenario, and typically involves total collapse of the nation back to its core. And "dusting off" takes another few generations where they re-conquer everything they lost and they begin expanding beyond that.

              Nothing that would shake our dear comrades in the East I'm sure. Sure, none of those currently alive will be alive when they have finished "dusting off", and the regime will almost certainly change entirely, but hey, theirs is a great

              • by cusco ( 717999 )

                You're thinking of Europe. The last period of social and economic chaos in China was the Cultural Revolution, and before that WWII and the Communist Revolution.

                • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

                  I'm thinking of China as it existed as a civilization over last five thousand years. Your ignorance of its history is showing in your last post.

                • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

                  To add specifics to the previous post, the previous peak came in 1700s to 1800s, before Opium Wars brought Chinese Empire down. Since then, it was attempting to re-organise first against the Western de facto rule and partitions by everyone from Westerner to Russians to Japanese until the civil war of late 1940s and early 1950s, which were the establishment of the new dynasty.

                  Cultural revolution was simply one of the attempts of the new dynasty, that being the Chinese Communist Party of doing what every dyna

          • In short, it has little to do with actual Bitcoins rather then with Chinese wealth flowing out of the Country.
            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              That is how real economy usually works, "it's not the medium of exchange, it's the root cause of usage of medium of exchange".

        • since it might create a giant Greater Fool scheme similar to that 2008 housing crash where bad investments were being passed around and so long as you weren't the one holding them when a minor cyclic economic downturn hit you made out like a bandit.

          The problem is we've let our economy function like a house of cards. It looks nice, but it's super fragile.
      • Greed is infinite.

      • And it's going to happen fast. Like in an hour, probably in the middle of the night. In fact its guaranteed to be in the middle of the night for a large segment of hodlers no matter when it happens.

        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          I await the day when Satoshi Nakamoto (or his heirs) decides to cash out his BTC holdings. My understanding is that a dump of as little as $20 million in a day by a single holder will crash the price of BTC by something like 40% (please correct me if I'm wrong). There are a lot of houses in any major urban area worth more than that.

          • If his holdings ever move - just one BTC from his or another of the first wallets gets traded - look out below.

      • I could take your exact statement and make one small modification and it would still be just as true:

        In every story read about the economy over the past ten years or so, every one mentions that there's nothing to stop it from collapsing yet it gets bigger and bigger. When/If it eventually goes flat it's going to be a real mess.

        No currency has value outside of the real human productivity that gives it utility as a means of exchanging goods or services. Bitcoin could vanish like a fart in the wind tomorrow and if nothing else was affected then what's actually changed? If all Bitcoin became inaccessible due to some unknown bug and no one could access their wallet, do the gas pumps shut down, does the power grid switch off, and the as

  • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @09:20AM (#61271818)

    They are valuing the company at .5 of Goldman Sach's current market cap. I think that's insane.

    Goldman's 2021 Q1 profit was almost 7 billion. Coinbase's 2021 Q1 revenue was 1.28 billion

    Moreover I'm pretty sure it's a lot easier for Goldman to create a crypto exchange than it would be for Coinbase to set up asset management, investment banking, market making, sec lending, prime brokerage, and so on

    • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

      Goldman Sachs is worth billions because we the taxpayers bailed it the fuck out to the tune of 10 billions. We haven't bailed out Coinbase (yet): that probably makes it probably more valuable in terms of real value.

      • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @10:10AM (#61271960)

        Goldman Sachs is worth billions because we the taxpayers bailed it the fuck out to the tune of 10 billions. We haven't bailed out Coinbase (yet): that probably makes it probably more valuable in terms of real value.

        You mean the TARP bailout where the US taxpayers received repayment and a profit of about $1.4 billion in nine months?
        That was a pretty good deal for the taxpayers.

        https://www.reuters.com/articl... [reuters.com]

        "“In just nine months, the taxpayers have been repaid the full $10 billion that the government originally invested, along with $318 million in dividends,” the official said. “And Goldman is repurchasing the warrants for $1.1 billion.”"

        • Am I supposed to be glad the high-risk investment into a failing, reckless, mega-financial institution that I never intended to make and that was forced onto me turned out great?

          All I'm saying is, if they had failed as they should've without state intervention, they'd be worth nothing today. And you can be sure they'll do it again.

          • Am I supposed to be glad the high-risk investment into a failing, reckless, mega-financial institution that I never intended to make and that was forced onto me turned out great?

            All I'm saying is, if they had failed as they should've without state intervention, they'd be worth nothing today. And you can be sure they'll do it again.

            You should read up on how Hank Paulson strong-armed the banks to go along with the deal, whether they needed it or not.
            That's why the strong ones got out of it as fast as they could.

            It was a lot less risky an investment than you think. The treasury bought perpetual preferred shares with a fixed price and dividend, and got stock warrants in the deal too. It was structured to earn a significant return until the shares were repurchased, make a big profit as share prices went up, and be first in line to recov

    • by Ecuador ( 740021 )

      Plus it doesn't even seem to be very good at what it does, so it's not a particularly good service. After the Elon tweets a few months ago made the news a friend asked me if I knew how he could buy cryptocoins. I told him I heard "coinbase" is one of the reputable ones. He got back to me that he has been trying all day, it shows support for his country, but the supposed confirmation SMS never arrive so he can sign up. Out of curiosity I tried myself, registration flow seemed fine, until I had to choose a pa

      • Plus it doesn't even seem to be very good at what it does, so it's not a particularly good service. After the Elon tweets a few months ago made the news a friend asked me if I knew how he could buy cryptocoins. I told him I heard "coinbase" is one of the reputable ones. He got back to me that he has been trying all day, it shows support for his country, but the supposed confirmation SMS never arrive so he can sign up. Out of curiosity I tried myself, registration flow seemed fine, until I had to choose a password and it gave me an error message locking me out for 24 hours due to "too many log-in attempts". Yeah, great error response while registering a password - go figure. 2/2 people in different countries not able to register for completely different technical reasons is a small sample, but quite a bad one.
        Maybe if they get a few billion they can hire a couple of competent software engineers?

        I started creating an account but abandoned it at "Provide your bank account login credentials".
        That's completely unacceptable. Every other broker I've used does ACH or wire transfers, they don't ask for my bank login.

    • by ed1park ( 100777 )

      You could say or have said the same for Tesla vs Ford, Amazon vs Walmart, etc. Time will tell soon enough. And if you feel that strongly about it, you should short Coinbase. :)

      • You could say or have said the same for Tesla vs Ford, Amazon vs Walmart, etc. Time will tell soon enough. And if you feel that strongly about it, you should short Coinbase. :)

        Amazons IPO market cap was 300 million:
        https://www.benzinga.com/gener... [benzinga.com]

        Will you be buying Coinbase at $250/share?

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Remember - it's not about how much it's actually worth, it's about how much you can sell it for.

      Just so long as you're not the last one holding the hot potato, people can still make billions of off inflated prices like this whether they last a day or several years (e.g. Tesla).

      It's far more about getting out while you're ahead, before "reality sinks in", than anything to do with the actual numbers chosen.

    • They are valuing the company at .5 of Goldman Sach's current market cap. I think that's insane.

      Actually, when you put it that way, the price seems pretty reasonable - crypto is getting more an more popular by the day, and Coinbase is I think by far the largest portal to that for most people.

      Still not going to buy any IPO stock myself, as I think a market crash is imminent.... but I'll bet a lot of people see that initial IPO price shoot up.

  • by TheCowSaysMoo ( 4915561 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @12:33PM (#61272738)

    The latest from MarketWatch (12:09 PM ET): "Coinbase stock indicated to open around $364, implying a valuation of roughly $95 billion"

    A 50% valuation increase the day of the IPO? I wouldn't be surprised to see a LOT of short action at those kinds of prices.

  • I was going to talk at length about how 'investing' in this 'company' is basically lighting money on fire, giving it away to one of the biggest financial scams in human history, and so on, but reading the batch of comments already posted I see I don't need to do so, there's already plenty of people who see through the cryptocurrency scam for what it is. You'd get less ripped off in the end by investing in a pyramid scheme, or becoming an Amway dealer.
  • once again, like saying : "stay away, guttertrash, fight for a scrap of meat with flippy the robot [misorobotics.com] and entertain us a bit instead"
    pf ... back to doge-coin then :p

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