Coinbase announced a major product expansion during its “System Update” event, aiming to become an “everything exchange” by blending crypto with traditional finance.
Coinbase is rolling out commission-free trading of traditional U.S. stocks and ETFs directly in its main app initially hundreds of top stocks by market cap and volume, expanding to thousands. This is available to eligible U.S. users, with trading during standard market hours.
Prediction Markets
Now rolling out in the U.S. via a partnership with Kalshi, allowing users to trade event contracts on real-world outcomes like elections, sports, economic indicators, collectibles. Positions can be managed alongside crypto and other balances, starting at as little as $1 in USD or USDC. More platforms will be added later.
Tokenized Equities and Real-World Assets (RWAs)
Traditional stock trading is positioned as a stepping stone. Coinbase is launching Coinbase Tokenize, an institutional platform for issuing and managing tokenized RWAs, including equities. This will enable eventual on-chain tokenized stocks with features like 24/7 trading and blockchain settlement. Full details and rollout expected in early 2026.
Other announcements include simplified futures and perpetuals trading. Instant access to new Solana tokens. Global expansion of the Base App. Tools for businesses— Coinbase Business and custom stablecoins.
This move intensifies competition with platforms like Robinhood which also partners with Kalshi for prediction markets and positions Coinbase to capture growing demand for tokenized assets, where monthly volumes have recently surged.
Coinbase’s “System Update” event marked a pivotal shift toward becoming an “everything exchange,” integrating traditional finance (TradFi) with crypto. This includes immediate rollouts of commission-free U.S. stock/ETF trading and Kalshi-powered prediction markets, plus a roadmap for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) via the upcoming Coinbase Tokenize platform in early 2026.
Users can now trade stocks, crypto, futures/perpetuals, and event contracts in one app, with unified balances using USDC for predictions starting at $1. Tokenized equities promise 24/7 trading, instant settlement, and global access, democratizing markets currently limited by hours and geography.
Tokenized assets like Treasuries, funds already exceed $18B in 2025, up 400% YoY. Coinbase positions itself as compliant infrastructure for institutions. Could unlock new derivatives like equity-linked futures and efficient collateral use across assets.
Direct rivalry with Robinhood: Both now offer stocks + Kalshi prediction markets. Coinbase differentiates with crypto depth and on-chain roadmap; Robinhood with established stock user base.
Challenges traditional brokers like Schwab, Interactive Brokers by offering seamless crypto-TradFi crossover. Non-U.S. users get stock-linked perps for 24/7 exposure; Base app expansion to 140+ countries.
Prediction markets boom: Estimated $2B revenue now, potentially 5x by 2030 with institutional entry. Easier entry for TradFi users into crypto like stock traders discovering tokens and vice versa. Reduces friction with DEX integrations, like Jupiter for Solana tokens.
Less reliant on volatile crypto spot trading; new streams from stocks, predictions, and tokenization fees. Some see it as “capitulation” amid 2025’s weak prices— Bitcoin ~$88K, down from peaks, viewing pivot to stocks as bearish signal. Others view it as infrastructure win for mass adoption.
Business tools like Coinbase Business, custom stablecoins target enterprises, positioning Coinbase as payments/settlement layer. $COIN: Initial after-hours gains ~1-4%, but overall downtrend persists amid broader crypto weakness. Analysts optimistic long-term.
Limited immediate pump; focus on infrastructure over speculation. Mass onboarding via one-app convenience. New fees from stocks/predictions. Tokenization as major driver, $230M+ est. from equities
Coinbase leads compliant on-chain finance. Bullish if RWAs draw institutional capital Overall, this strengthens Coinbase’s moat in a maturing industry, accelerating the convergence of TradFi and crypto.
While short-term hype was tempered by market conditions, it lays groundwork for explosive growth in tokenized markets—potentially a multi-trillion opportunity by 2030.
JP Morgan Migrates its Tokenized Deposit Token to Base
JPMorgan Chase has migrated its tokenized USD deposit token, known as JPM Coin (ticker: JPMD), from its private permissioned blockchain (Kinexys, formerly Onyx) to Coinbase’s public Ethereum Layer-2 network, Base.
This marks the first full deployment of JPMorgan’s bank-backed deposit token on a public blockchain, driven by growing institutional client demand for on-chain payments, collateral management, and margin settlements using regulated bank deposits rather than stablecoins.
The process began with a proof-of-concept pilot in June 2025, went live for institutional clients in November 2025, and the recent migration expands its use on public infrastructure.
JPM Coin represents direct claims on USD deposits held at JPMorgan, enabling 24/7 near-instant settlements. It remains permissioned available only to approved institutional clients and can potentially earn interest, distinguishing it from most stablecoins.
Primary use cases include on-chain collateral for crypto trades, margin payments, and faster cross-border transfers, addressing limitations of traditional bank accounts and stablecoins.
JPMorgan executives, including Basak Toprak — Product Head of Deposit Tokens, cited client demand for public blockchain compatibility as the main driver. This move bridges traditional finance with public blockchains while maintaining bank control over compliance and issuance.
JPMorgan processes trillions in daily payments and continues expanding its blockchain initiatives, including plans for multi-chain support. This is driven by institutional client demand for on-chain operations while maintaining regulatory oversight.
Bridging Traditional Finance and Decentralized Finance
Marks the first time a major global bank has fully deployed a regulated deposit token on a public blockchain, enabling interoperability with DeFi protocols and crypto ecosystems.
Institutions can now use bank-backed dollars for on-chain activities without relying solely on private networks. Signals growing acceptance by Wall Street of public blockchains, potentially accelerating institutional adoption of Ethereum L2s like Base.
Unlike most stablecoins like USDT, USDC, JPMD represents direct claims on actual USD deposits at JPMorgan, potentially interest-bearing and eligible for FDIC insurance. Reduces counterparty risk— no private issuer default concerns and offers yield, making it more attractive for institutions.
Positions tokenized bank deposits as a competitive threat to stablecoins for institutional on-chain cash equivalents, especially post-regulatory clarity. Enables near-instant, round-the-clock settlements on Base’s low-cost, high-speed network, bypassing traditional banking hours and delays.
Primary use cases: on-chain collateral management, margin payments for crypto trades, and faster cross-border transfers. JPMorgan processes trillions daily; even a fraction shifting on-chain could boost liquidity and reduce costs significantly.
Strengthens Base as a hub for institutional activity, leveraging its cheap transactions and Ethereum security. Increases demand for ETH and on-chain volume; analysts suggest potential massive RWA inflows.
Coinbase benefits directly as a JPMorgan client and Base builder, enhancing its institutional offerings. Remains permissioned, allowing JPMorgan to maintain KYC/AML compliance and control.
Encourages other banks, like HSBC, BNY Mellon to follow with similar tokenized deposits. Highlights preference for bank-issued tokens over stablecoins in some regulatory views; could influence global standards for digital money.
Multi-chain support, multi-currency, and broader client access pending approvals. Potential Risks and LimitationsStill a “walled garden” until multi-bank interoperability arrives. Dependent on regulatory evolution; not available to retail clients currently. Concentration risk: Relies heavily on JPMorgan as the issuer.
This move accelerates the convergence of TradFi and crypto, providing institutions with safer, more efficient on-chain tools while legitimizing public blockchains for regulated finance. It could reshape wholesale payments, collateral management, and the role of stablecoins in institutional markets.






