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It’s been a minute since I checked in on our friends at Coinbase, and so when I saw Reuters noting that a class action suit would be going ahead, I thought perhaps we should all reflect together on Coinbase’s cruel summer.
The company’s shares have fallen by more than a third in the last 6 months, to $147.95 as of this writing, from $238.55 on March 6th. On the company’s first day of trading, in April 2021, its closing price was $328.28.
Quite a turn of fortune! Certainly some price fluctuation can be chalked up to the vagaries of the cryptocurrency market — Coinbase was trading at $153.98 at the start of this year, before a Bitcoin ETF got approved. When Bitcoin began a run in February, Coinbase also started trading up. Still, there have been some fairly obvious bits of bad news, such as yesterday’s ruling.
The class action, briefly put, is about whether Coinbase adequately told its investors about the business’s risks from bankruptcy and regulatory agencies. On Sept. 5th, a judge rejected Coinbase’s motion to dismiss the suit — though Coinbase did manage to get the suit’s claims somewhat narrowed.
Backing Donald Trump maybe looked like a better idea when he was running against President Joe Biden