- Stablecoins and the Base network sit at the core of its plans through 2026.
- The strategy places Coinbase closer to retail brokerages and derivatives platforms.
- Security and support concerns remain a constraint as the platform broadens.
Coinbase is entering 2026 with a platform that looks increasingly different from a traditional crypto exchange.
The company is placing greater emphasis on stablecoins, its Ethereum layer-2 network Base, and a wider range of trading products that stretch well beyond digital tokens.
The shift reflects how crypto platforms are adapting as growth in spot trading cools and competition intensifies.
Rather than positioning itself only as a gateway to cryptocurrencies, Coinbase is aligning its business around broader financial access, with trading, payments, and onchain activity increasingly converging inside a single ecosystem.
Platform strategy shift
In a New Year’s post, Brian Armstrong reiterated Coinbase’s ambition to build what it calls an “everything exchange.”
The strategy focuses on expanding product lines so users can trade and interact with multiple asset classes from one interface.
That direction was formalised at the company’s year-end conference in December, where Coinbase rolled out stock trading and prediction markets.
These launches marked a clear move beyond cryptocurrencies and into areas traditionally dominated by retail brokerages and derivatives platforms.
Coinbase executives have framed the rollout of stock trading on the main app as a key step toward enabling round-the-clock access to markets, with crypto, equities, and exchange-traded funds sitting side by side.
Expansion beyond crypto
Coinbase’s product push is not limited to its exchange. The company has rebranded its wallet as an “everything app,” adding social networking features and deeper onchain functionality.
The aim is to keep users active across more use cases, rather than relying solely on trading volumes.
The company has also launched onchain prediction markets in partnership with Kalshi, allowing users to participate in markets tied to real-world events.
Alongside this, Coinbase has flagged plans for perpetual futures that would cover both crypto assets and stocks.
These additions move the platform further into direct competition with firms that operate across equities, derivatives, and commodities, rather than only crypto-native rivals.
Stablecoins and Base
Stablecoins form a central part of Coinbase’s longer-term roadmap.
The company has described them as essential financial infrastructure, particularly for cross-border payments, payroll, and settlement.
Armstrong has said banks are likely to seek interest-bearing stablecoin products over time, underlining Coinbase’s view that stablecoins will play a growing role in mainstream finance.
Base, Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 network, is positioned as another pillar of this strategy.
The network is designed to support consumer applications, creators, and onchain services that can scale beyond Ethereum’s main chain.
However, Base’s handling of creator coins has attracted criticism from some developers, who argue the approach risks prioritising viral growth while the company promotes creators as a key onboarding channel.



