Today: 30 June 2026
Coinbase stock drops nearly 3% as an insider sale notice lands and traders look to a big data week
28 February 2026
2 mins read

Coinbase stock drops nearly 3% as an insider sale notice lands and traders look to a big data week

New York, February 28, 2026, 15:05 (EST) — Market closed.

Coinbase Global Inc shares fell 2.88% on Friday to close at $175.85, with the stock swinging between $171.81 and $179.06 as volume ran above 11 million shares. U.S. markets are shut through the weekend, leaving crypto prices and macro headlines to set the tone into Monday.

The move followed a noisy week for Coinbase, after the company enabled commission-free stock and ETF trading for all U.S. users, with 24-hour weekday access. Chief Executive Brian Armstrong called it a “big moment” in a social media post and said it was another step toward offering tokenized equities. Investopedia

Why it matters now: Coinbase has been trying to broaden beyond crypto trading fees, but its results still lean heavily on how much customers trade when crypto prices swing. Earlier this month it reported a surprise quarterly loss as transaction revenue slipped, even as “subscription and services” revenue rose on strength tied to stablecoins, Reuters reported. Reuters

Friday’s pullback also came as Wall Street ended lower. The S&P 500 fell 0.4% and the Nasdaq slid 0.9%, with investors weighing inflation worries and geopolitical tensions alongside a fresh debate over winners and losers in the AI buildout, the Associated Press reported.

Crypto itself did not give a clean signal into the weekend. Bitcoin last traded around $66,284 on Saturday, while ether was near $1,941 — both modestly higher on the day — but the tape has been jumpy enough that traders are still treating crypto-linked equities like a risk barometer.

Company filings added their own noise. A Form 144 filed on Friday showed Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal disclosed a proposed sale of 5,253 Class A shares, with an aggregate market value of about $921,114, through J.P. Morgan. A Form 144 is a required notice tied to planned resales under SEC Rule 144.

Another filing earlier in the week flagged insider selling as well. A Form 4 filed on Thursday showed Chief People Officer Lawrence Brock sold 4,821 Class A shares on Feb. 24 at weighted-average prices in the mid-$150s, under a Rule 10b5-1 plan — a pre-arranged trading plan often used by executives.

Regulatory and compliance headlines are also back in the mix for the broader sector. Tether said it had frozen about $4.2 billion of its USDT stablecoin over links to illicit activity, Reuters reported — a reminder that law enforcement pressure around crypto rails remains a live issue. (A stablecoin is a crypto token designed to track a currency such as the U.S. dollar.)

Coinbase was not alone on Friday. Robinhood Markets and Strategy ended down about 5% each, while bitcoin miner Riot Platforms was roughly flat, according to market data.

The question for Monday is whether this week’s “everything app” push translates into steadier engagement, or just adds another moving part to a stock already tethered to crypto mood swings.

But there’s an obvious downside scenario: if crypto prices sag or trading activity dries up, transaction revenue can fall fast, and product expansion does not instantly replace that lost volume. The sector’s regulatory drumbeat can also turn from background risk to headline risk in a hurry.

What investors are watching next is less about a single Coinbase headline and more about the calendar. U.S. manufacturing data are due on Monday, March 2, followed by the February jobs report on Friday, March 6 at 8:30 a.m. ET, and the February CPI release on March 11 — all potential triggers for rates and risk appetite.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • Sainsbury's Gains, FTSE 100 Up After UK GDP Tops Forecasts
    June 30, 2026, 12:36 PM EDT. London's FTSE 100 finished Tuesday up 0.25% after UK Q1 GDP came in stronger at 0.6%, better than the prior quarter's 0.1%. Year-on-year, UK GDP grew 0.9% in Q1. Retail inflation was steady, the British Retail Consortium said, holding at 1.2% annually in June. Sainsbury's shares rose 1.11% after Q1 retail sales climbed 2.7%, with the grocer keeping its 2027 profit goal. Babcock International pushed 2.74% higher, even as its price target was cut, helped by news the UK Ministry of Defence will buy six Common Combat Vessels as it shifts toward mixed naval crews.
Why Is AI Not Perfect? Regulators Are Forcing Chatbots to Admit the Flaw
Previous Story

Why Is AI Not Perfect? Regulators Are Forcing Chatbots to Admit the Flaw

Ashtead share price: AHT set to disappear from London screens as Sunbelt listing goes live
Next Story

Ashtead share price: AHT set to disappear from London screens as Sunbelt listing goes live

Go toTop