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Bitcoin

Coinbase Opens at $102 Billion Valuation on First Day of Public Trading (axios.com) 66

Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase opened trading on Wednesday at $381 per share, giving it a fully diluted market value of around $102 billion. From a report: This is a slight premium to the most recent private trades for Coinbase stock, and more than 50% higher than the reference price set last night by the Nasdaq. Coinbase's public listing has been among the most anticipated in recent years, with expectations it will garner a massive market cap. Further reading: Coinbase's blockbuster debut is a 'watershed' for crypto -- but there are risks ahead.
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Coinbase Opens at $102 Billion Valuation on First Day of Public Trading

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  • by crow ( 16139 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @02:21PM (#61273296) Homepage Journal

    I'm under the impression that Coinbase is to cryptocurrencies as Nasdaq is to stocks. I can see an exchange being valuable, but that valuable? Do they also directly hold a lot of cryptocurrency?

    • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @02:26PM (#61273326)

      They get bigger fees than Visa/Mastercard. I’m sure they hold some currency, but not nearly enough to justify the valuation IMO. I wouldn’t touch them with your 10’ pole, but some might call that risk aversion.

      Personally, I find it rather ironic that an exchange for crypto currency would hold so much value, as that would imply the only value of BTC and others are transactional and not as a store of value or as a currency. I find this especially ironic given the extremely high transacttion fees Coinbase charges.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @02:30PM (#61273348)
    despite the pandemic, and in their SEC filing they attributed it to "Wealth Migration", which is their euphemism for for "The Rich Got Richer and Everyone Else got poorer".

    We're putting too much money at the top, hoping it'll trickle down. The wealthy have more money than they can spend or invest. So they're looking at increasingly risky investments because they aren't personally risking anything.

    A few nights back Tucker Carlson, a well known pundit on Fox News, suggested to his audience of millions that the reason scientists are telling us to keep wearing masks is that the vaccines don't work.

    My first thought was how did he get away with that. Not because I expected liberals to call him out (they did, it was completely ineffectual) but because I figured his bosses would want everybody vaccinated so the economy would start back up sooner. There's plenty of research that shows that addressing pandemics rapidly has overall better economic outcomes. So why was Carlson allowed to make this point?

    Then it hit me, the people at the top would are the only ones who could call him on it are completely disconnected from the part of the economy that is hurt by the pandemic. Their wealth went up. And they've used the economic downturn to buy up property at rock bottom prices and buy out competitors (increasing profits by laying people off as you do after a Merger or Acquisition).

    To bring it back to TFA, there is no way in hell Coinbase is worth 100 billion dollars. They don't have a product. They make nothing useful for humanity. Even if you think cryto is good they're a middle man. At best their harmless and at worst parasitic. And that's before we get into a discussion of the harm crypto will do and how none of it's benefits are likely to ever materialize (you can fine plenty of articles explaining how easy currency manipulation is with even the largest Crypto coins, some of them right here on /.).

    So what do we have here? A ton of billionaires and multi-millionaires with too much money taking risks with it that can and will bite us all in the ass if they set off a run on stocks and banks. Remember, when these people lose money they start doing mass layoffs and making the survivors work harder for less money. That's what happened in 2008 and if we keep letting "wealth migration" carry on to it's logical conclusion that's what'll keep happening.
    • by invid ( 163714 ) on Wednesday April 14, 2021 @03:09PM (#61273588)
      For the rich, money is no longer money in the sense that the rest of us look at it. We normal folk see it as something to exchange for the necessities. For the wealthy, the cost of the necessities is a rounding error of their total wealth. Money is only a scorecard to see which one of them is "winning". How else could anyone consider spending millions on NFT art?
      • It is more about “protecting” their wealth than showing it off. If all your money is in the stock market, the first thing you do is buy a[nother] house. But, then you would like your money to outpace inflation so your purchasing power does not decline— and you treat the inflation rate as that of the stock market indexes. So, you have to outperform the major indecies over the long-term.

        People used to look at commercial real-estate, but that is too risky now with the potential for post-co

      • it's Power. The power to make the rest of us do anything they want.
        • by invid ( 163714 )

          it's Power. The power to make the rest of us do anything they want.

          Good point. They want to have poor people around, people without even a basic financial safety net, to ensure that there will be people around to say "How high?" when they say "Jump!"

      • they're probably not even keeping score, the money is just piling up so quickly that they need to get rid of it, and NFTs don't take up space.
    • millionaires and billionaires are not the only ones buying stocks, lots of middle class own stocks in their retirement accounts and love the stock market going way up
  • Feel a bit sorry for those who got caught up in the hoopla and bought at the $420 to $430 level thinking they'd be able to find another fool who'd pay even more to take shares off their hands.

    It's now dropped to $360/share

  • Buy Premium Prices! Tim buys his prices from China! Mine are REAL. American Made! [youtube.com]

    It's a bit weird we get so excited about Ponzi schemes, and the media coverage is downright intense. I guess this is the result of a get-rich-quick mentality. Honestly if you want to make money with far less risk, buy real estate. It's not going to make you a billionaire over night, you need to play the Spanish Lottery [wikipedia.org] to do that.

    • I’d say most real estate investments are pretty high risk, but that is my bias. The only way to reliably make money as a small investor in real estate is to be a slum lord. Even that has pretty good risk today with the lack of a solution to rent relief.

      • The only way to reliably make money as a small investor in real estate is to be a slum lord.

        Bridge loan on a 1-4 unit rental that already has tenants in good standing. Do the math and make sure you can cover your payments. Stay on top of your taxes so you can get the deductions you're owed, else it won't work. (depreciation is very useful)

        This is not the same as a slum lord. You're simply collecting pretty ordinary rent from middle class families and maintaining the property to a standard that allows you to continue to keep that class of resident. Being an actual slum lord where you let your prope

        • Maybe it is just the markets I have lived in, but most of the cap rates I see are under 5% and need ~40% down to be cash flow positive, and you are just seeing a ~3% rate of return excluding potential appreciation and without vacancy reserves. Add in closing costs and the investment isn’t really liquid for 5-10 years (as an investment). If you are looking at a 30-year timeline I get it, but only barely. I guess if you can do 90% of the upkeep yourself the risk is reduced some, but still not easy.

          • Bridge loans don't have the requirements of 40% down. But the interest is high. They're a temporary measure designed to move into a different loan or to convert into a sale.

            Absolutely depends on the market, or really on the parameters of the investment. Not my first rodeo.

      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        Any idiot has been able to make money in real estate since about 2003. That's very unusual, and is causing a lot of problems. In a normal economy you are absolutely correct, and there's a very good reason for it.

  • .. it's 2000 all over again.
  • Add crypto to the ever expanding number of bubbles in the economy. We're having a bubble bubble. Bubblception.

    • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

      I don't think anyone serious doubts that cryptocurrency is in a bubble. In its defense, cryptocurrency appears designed as the ideal bubble asset. Never expires, not tied to anything real, an asset whose entire list of features are "is an asset". You can make as many copies of you like, but you have to brand each one differently. You can create sub-tokens that exist on the existing ledgers. Literally any amount of anything can be expressed in these terms.

      Starting with bitcoin, stern men have frowned an

  • Yea, I know some of you are more successful that Warren Buffet, but for the rest of us:
    • * The key to investing is not assessing how much an industry is going to affect society, or how much it will grow, but rather determining the competitive advantage of any given company and, above all the durability of that advantage.
    • * Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.
    • * If you aren’t willing to own a stock for ten years, don’t even think about owning it for ten minutes.
    • * I
  • So Coinbase gets valued at ~ $100 billion. I had a quick hunt round and a February 2021 valuation for all Bitcoin currently in circulation came out, according to Google, as $600 billion, That’s an interesting and slightly implausible ratio, right there.

    Let’s try another comparison then. JPMorganChase, one of the biggest global banks, has a market cap of about $467 billion. It has a proven track record, a long history, and a pretty savvy CEO. It just doesn’t seem plausible that effectiv
  • I can't wait for greedy selfish stockholders from Wall Street telling Coinbase how to run their business. Get ready for triple the fees, everyone!

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