Coinbase is not the same company it was three years ago. The platform has expanded well beyond retail crypto trading into subscriptions, stablecoins, institutional services, custody, derivatives, and most recently, prediction markets.
Coinbase Global, Inc., COIN
That last one turned heads fast. Prediction markets hit $100 million in annualized revenue in March 2026 — just two months after launching in the U.S. Coinbase called it one of the fastest-scaling products in company history. Hard to argue with that.
Q1 2026 was broadly positive. The company reported a new all-time high in crypto trading-volume market share alongside the strong prediction markets number.
Subscription and services revenue is now a major part of the story. Coinbase guided Q1 2026 subscription and services revenue between $550 million and $630 million. That’s meaningful because this revenue type doesn’t swing as wildly as trading fees do when crypto markets get choppy.
Coinbase One subscriptions also hit around 1 million users. USDC held on platform reached an all-time high too, reflecting the company’s growing role in the stablecoin market.
The old Coinbase lived and died by spot trading. The new version has more tools in the belt. Revenue now flows from subscriptions, stablecoins, custody, institutional trading, and new product lines — not just retail buy/sell activity.
Reuters reported on May 2 that Coinbase said a deal was reached on a key provision of a major crypto bill in the Senate. A clearer regulatory framework would benefit established players like Coinbase more than smaller firms with less infrastructure and lobbying reach.
That regulatory tailwind, if it materializes, could be a meaningful unlock for the business long-term.
Despite the platform progress, Coinbase cut roughly 700 jobs in early May — about 14% of its workforce. The company framed the move as repositioning for the AI era while managing costs through crypto market volatility.
It’s a bit of a mixed message. Management talks up the platform while trimming headcount. But it also shows discipline, and investors generally prefer that to runaway spending.
The core tension in the Coinbase story is still there: better business, but not a predictable one. When crypto prices fall and volumes dry up, the stock feels it quickly.
Wall Street is sitting somewhere in the middle on this one. Coinbase currently holds a Hold consensus from 33 analysts on MarketBeat — 19 buys, 10 holds, 4 sells. The average 12-month price target sits at $252.20.
That split says a lot. Analysts see the platform expansion as real. They also haven’t forgotten that COIN can drop hard when crypto sentiment turns.
The most recent data point investors are watching is that Q1 2026 subscription and services revenue guidance of $550M–$630M, which will be tested when full results come in.
The post Coinbase (COIN) Stock Looks Different Now — Is It Finally Worth Buying? appeared first on CoinCentral.


