Crypto is in a slump, but Coinbase shares are climbing.
The reason: the firm just told investors it's getting smaller right before its earnings report on Thursday.
CEO Brian Armstrong said in a memo Tuesday that Coinbase is laying off about 14% of its staff. He blamed two things: a softer crypto market and AI changing how the firm works.
Why now
Armstrong called it "two forces converging at the same time."
The first is the crypto downturn, which has hit Coinbase's quarterly numbers in the past. The second is a bigger bet, which is that small AI-driven teams can do the work that used to take a lot more people.
His pitch to staff was simple. Coinbase needs to look more like a startup again. Lean, fast, and "AI-native" was the phrase he kept using.
A familiar move
This isn't Coinbase's first round of cuts during a crypto slump. The firm cut about 18% of staff in mid-2022, when crypto prices crashed and trading slowed.
What's new this time is the framing. AI is doing the work that the market alone used to do.
Coinbase is also doing this just two days before its Q1 earnings drop on Thursday. The timing is no accident, since investors get a leaner cost story before they see the revenue print.
The bigger pattern
Coinbase isn't alone in the AI-driven layoff wave. Block told staff earlier this year it was cutting about 40% of its workforce, citing the same AI logic.
Pinterest, CrowdStrike, and Chegg have all named AI as a reason to shrink their teams.
The story is the same across all of them. Smaller teams. Faster output. Fewer people doing more, with AI tools picking up the rest.
For investors, that's the thread to follow. Tech firms that frame layoffs as AI restructuring are signaling a long-term shift in how they expect their cost base to look.
The crypto pivot underneath
Armstrong is not pulling Coinbase away from crypto. He pointed to stablecoins, tokenization, and prediction markets as the next wave of growth.
Stablecoins are crypto tokens pegged to the dollar, used for fast payments. Tokenization is the process of putting real-world assets like stocks, bonds, or real estate onto a blockchain.
Both are areas where Coinbase has added new products in the past year. Prediction markets, where users bet on the outcome of events, have also drawn growing interest from regulators and exchanges.
Across the crypto industry, exchanges are shifting away from the trading boom that fueled their early growth. Steady revenue, regulation, and compliance are now the new center of gravity.
What to watch
Q1 earnings drop Thursday.
Investors will get a fresh read on whether the cuts were forced by weak revenue or driven by a real push to be more efficient.
The bigger question is what Coinbase actually looks like a year from now. A leaner team backed by a wider product set could be a stronger business. But only if those new lines, like stablecoins and tokenization, scale fast enough to offset slower trading volumes.
Investors had been bracing for a soft quarter. Coinbase decided to get ahead of it.
