Today: 13 May 2026
Coinbase Layoffs Hit 700 Jobs as AI Rebuild Intensifies Tech Worker Anxiety

Coinbase Layoffs Hit 700 Jobs as AI Rebuild Intensifies Tech Worker Anxiety

San Francisco, May 6, 2026, 06:17 PDT

  • Coinbase plans to eliminate roughly 700 jobs, amounting to about 14% of its workforce worldwide.
  • The crypto exchange says it’s restructuring to slash expenses and rebuild its business for the AI era.
  • That shift is fueling fresh anxiety over AI tools increasingly driving white-collar tech job cuts.

Coinbase Global plans to slash roughly 700 positions—about 14% of its worldwide staff—and pivot the business toward artificial intelligence, pushing forward one of the most visible tie-ins between layoffs and AI from a major U.S. tech-finance name. According to a regulatory filing, the restructuring is expected to wrap up in the second quarter, with projected costs of $50 million to $60 million, primarily for severance packages and termination payouts.

This time, Coinbase isn’t chalking up the cuts to the usual crypto slump. CEO Brian Armstrong told staff that the company faces both sluggish crypto-market conditions and the rise of AI tools capable of boosting productivity for leaner teams. These AI agents—basically software bots—can handle things like code writing and testing, though humans still oversee the process.

The layoffs arrive just as tech employees grapple with a wider shakeup. Traders on prediction-market sites, according to CNBC, were putting strong odds on U.S. tech job cuts surpassing 447,000 in 2026.

Coinbase is still on solid financial footing, Armstrong said, though its business swings with the ups and downs of crypto markets. He described the environment as “currently in a down market” and said the firm has to slim down costs ahead of any future expansion. Coinbase

Coinbase’s shake-up isn’t just about trimming staff—executives want no more than five layers between the CEO, chief operating officer, and the rest of the company. The push: fewer “pure managers,” more “player-coaches” who split their time between leading and doing the work themselves. According to Fortune, some managers could wind up with 15 or more direct reports. The company is also piloting “AI-native pods,” where a solo worker, supported by AI tools, juggles engineering, design, and product roles all at once. Fortune

U.S. staff hit by the cuts will get a minimum of 16 weeks base pay, with an extra two weeks for every year on the job, as well as their next equity vesting and six months of COBRA health insurance, Armstrong said. System access was cut off that day—a move he described as “sudden and harsh,” but, he argued, essential for safeguarding customer data. Coinbase

Analysts described the job cuts as serving a mix of defensive and strategic aims. Owen Lau at Clear Street called the move “supportive of forward profitability.” Daniel T. Fannon of Jefferies flagged a slowdown in April trading on digital-asset exchanges, suggesting a softer setup for the second quarter. Coin Bureau’s Nic Puckrin pointed to slumping Coinbase shares and lighter crypto trading volumes as signals behind the decision. Investing.com

Competition is tightening. As reported by The New York Times, Block, Meta, and Microsoft have all trimmed headcounts or slowed hiring, with AI budgets climbing and better coding tools pushing software roles into new territory. That’s weighing on tech jobs across the board.

Skepticism persists over the AI narrative. Aleksandar Tomic, associate dean for strategy, innovation and technology at Boston College, told Fortune some firms frame layoffs as “AI restructurings”—a way to spin staff cuts as efficiency plays, not signals of business trouble. Fortune

But there’s risk here. Coinbase warned that local labor laws, consultation requirements, and other surprises could drive up costs or delay the timeline. The bigger question: Can a leaner, more AI-focused staff deliver in a tightly regulated, security-conscious crypto environment—especially if trading volumes stay sluggish, or stablecoin revenues take a hit?

Coinbase plans to break down its expense outlook during Thursday’s first-quarter earnings call. The company has already gone further than most tech peers on a topic many are still tiptoeing around: exactly how many roles artificial intelligence could cut.

Stock Market Today

  • Hims & Hers Health Misses Q1 Sales Estimates, Shares Drop 11.5%
    May 13, 2026, 9:46 AM EDT. Telehealth company Hims & Hers Health (NYSE:HIMS) reported Q1 CY2026 revenue of $608.1 million, a 3.8% year-on-year increase but below analysts' $616.8 million estimate, sending shares down 11.5%. GAAP loss per share was $0.40, worse than the expected $0.03. Adjusted EBITDA missed forecasts with a 7.3% margin. Despite the miss, the company raised full-year revenue guidance to $2.9 billion and projects Q2 revenue at $690 million, beating estimates by 6%. Customer count rose to 2.58 million, supporting long-term demand amid operating margin contraction to -12.9%. The company, known for telehealth services targeting stigmatized conditions, has maintained strong five-year CAGR sales growth of 69.2%, signaling sustained market resonance despite near-term challenges.

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