
Coinbase’s recent S1 filing has been hailed as something of a watershed moment.
What might be most incredible is that private markets value the company at about $100 billion, putting it ahead of the most-established traditional exchanges. And that’s by quite a margin! If we look at traditional exchanges, one of the more robust has been Hong Kong’s HKEX, which was strong enough to attempt a takeover of the London Stock Exchange last year. As of now, it’s market cap comes to a mere 75 percent of Coinbase’s pre-IPO price.
Even cryptocurrency enthusiasts may be wondering if that number is a little overstated. The short answer is, that like much else in the digital asset and fintech space, this valuation is largely based on forward-looking factors. However, when looking at the S1 filing, the numbers aren’t actually that unrealistic.
Coinbase’s 2020 revenue of $1.3 billion puts it ahead of Nasdaq’s “Market Services” segment and at a half of HKEX. What’s eye-popping is the 240 percent growth in revenue year-over-year. Even with continued liberalization of Chinese Markets, HKEX is unlikely to improve exponentially on it’s already-impressive 18 percent year-over-year growth, for instance.
And that is almost certainly what’s driving the bull case for Coinbase. Cryptocurrency is still a nascent market, driven in large part by retail customers. In terms of margins, Coinbase doesn’t fare too badly either with its net-income margin of roughly 33 percent — far below HKEX’s 77 percent margin but quite reasonable for what’s effectively an early-stage company.
The bears do have a lot going for them also. And I won’t get into all the risk factors as the challenges of regulatory oversight and the volatile nature of cryptocurrency itself are well-understood. But what’s interesting is the imminent challenge to centralized exchanges from within the cryptocurrency space.
UniSwap is one such contender. It’s a decentralized exchange that operates…