On Tuesday, Coinbase added copper and platinum futures to its trading platform to broaden offerings beyond cryptocurrencies. The products join existing gold and silver contracts as the company seeks revenue diversification amid market pressure.
Shares fell 1.24% to as low as $208 intraday, their lowest level since May last year, and closed at $210. The stock is down more than 10% this year and about 46% from its July high of $398.
Brian Armstrong highlighted the change in a tweet, saying “PSA: You can trade precious metals on Coinbase.” Bitcoin remained roughly above $88,000 as markets sought stability.
A quarterly report from Coinbase Institutional and Glassnode said “excess leverage having been flushed from the system in Q4,” and that “the macro environment looks sound, and monetary policy should be supportive.” Steven Wu of Clearpool said the share drop reflects “wider market conditions rather than a specific loss of confidence in execution,” calling the stock a “high-beta risk asset.”
Allen Ding, head of Bitfire Research, described the metals additions as “tactical product diversification rather than a complete strategic hedge.” He said metals liquidity still concentrates in legacy venues, making the offerings complementary for user retention rather than a primary growth engine.
Wu warned regulatory uncertainty around the CLARITY stablecoin framework could “materially impact USDC adoption and Coinbase’s earnings,” especially if yield distribution is restricted. (Ed. note: Limits on yield distribution could reduce a high-margin revenue stream.)

