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Coinbase (COIN) faces target cuts after Q4 miss

JPMorgan, Barclays cut Coinbase targets after Q4 earnings miss

Barclays, JPMorgan, Benchmark, and Clear Street lowered their Coinbase price targets after the company missed fourth-quarter expectations, citing weak retail trading and macro headwinds, as reported by CoinDesk. The revisions followed a period of softer consumer engagement and heightened crypto volatility that pressured trading activity.

Earnings and revenue came in below Wall Street forecasts, according to MSN, prompting analysts to reassess near‑term assumptions for volumes and fee capture. The collective stance emphasizes caution on cyclically sensitive transaction income while models are recalibrated for a tougher backdrop.

Why targets fell: weak retail trading and macro headwinds

The primary drivers flagged by analysts were soft retail trading volumes and pressure on the “take rate,” which is the average fee revenue earned per unit of trading activity. Trading volume refers to the total notional value of crypto assets exchanged on the platform over a given period; when retail activity slows and users migrate to lower‑fee products, fee yield tends to compress.

Macro conditions compounded the pressure. In February, Bitcoin fell about 29.9% over the prior 30 days to roughly $65,189.77, according to Yahoo Finance, a drawdown that typically reduces retail engagement and narrows spreads on crypto venues. Framing the near‑term setup, one research desk captured the mixed outlook: “believes the risk/reward profile ‘skews to the upside’ at these levels,” said H.C. Wainwright in a research note.

Immediate impact on COIN stock and crypto sentiment

The stock initially shook off the report, with shares rising roughly 15% in early trading even as analysts cut forecasts, according to TipRanks; at the time of this writing, COIN was around $154.70, up 9.64%, based on NasdaqGS real‑time data. That intraday move suggests investors weighed softer Q4 metrics against expectations that conditions could stabilize alongside broader crypto markets.

Near‑term crypto sentiment remains sensitive to Bitcoin’s trajectory and rates‑driven risk appetite. When major tokens retreat, retail participation and spot trading depth on exchanges often wane, which can dampen volumes and lower average fees until volatility or prices recover.

Beyond trading fees: subscriptions, custody, USDC, Base

Analysts also highlighted diversification beyond transaction revenue, subscriptions and services tied to USDC, institutional custody, and activity on Coinbase’s Base network, as potential buffers to cyclicality, as reported by Investor’s Business Daily. These lines can provide more recurring revenue characteristics relative to pure trading fees, especially when retail turnover is subdued.

Even so, these streams still depend on on‑chain activity, counterparty demand, and regulatory clarity around market structure and stablecoins. Progress on rulemaking could improve visibility, but timing and scope remain uncertain, and estimates will likely continue to reflect that uncertainty in the near term.

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