

This past week, Coinbase joined the S&P 500, one of the
world’s most elite stock indexes — a triumph for the crypto firm,
which spent much of the 2020s battling US government agencies like
the SEC and Commodity Futures Trading Commission for its
survival.
But this attainment is not about one company alone.
“This is more than an achievement for Coinbase; it’s a landmark
for the broader crypto and blockchain industry,” said Meryem
Habibi, chief revenue officer of Bitpace. Coinbase joining the
S&P 500 doesn’t just boost the owner of the largest US
cryptocurrency exchange. “It cements the legitimacy of an entire
asset class,” she told Cointelegraph.
Jason Kennard, head of business development at ARK Invest
Europe, told Cointelegraph that for the first time, a crypto-native
firm had met the stringent profitability, liquidity and market cap
requirements of “the most iconic benchmark index” in global
markets, adding:
It sends a strong
signal to institutional investors: Crypto infrastructure has
matured into a credible, systemic part of the financial
ecosystem.
It is a milestone event, Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at
Interactive Brokers, told Cointelegraph, “because whether they want
it or not, or know it or not, equity investors who buy S&P 500
index funds will now have crypto exposure via COIN.” Indeed,
Coinbase could now get billions of dollars in passive investor
flows just from becoming part of the S&P 500.
“What’s remarkable about this is that just a few months ago, the
company was engaged in an intense legal battle with the SEC, which
was charging that its platform was illegal because it was
trafficking in unregistered securities,” Benchmark analyst Mark
Palmer told
CNBC.
“This normalizes crypto exposure in conservative portfolios that
might otherwise avoid digital assets” and brings with it indirect
adoption by institutional investors, retirement plans and sovereign
funds that has broader industry significance, added Habibi.
Still, it was only a matter of time before some crypto
firm would be brought into the S&P 500 fold, Russell Rhoads,
clinical associate professor of financial management at Indiana
University’s Kelley School of Business Indianapolis, told
Cointelegraph. “It does make sense for COIN or some other
crypto-related firm to be in the index, as the industry is becoming
more important to the global economy and you want the S&P 500
constituents to be representative of the economy.”
Separately, Coinbase also reported a data breach last week, a “compromise of
passwords or private keys” that could eventually cost the crypto
exchange $180 million to $400 million.
The hack has exposed the personal information of tens of
thousands of users and has left them vulnerable to robberies and kidnappings, as seen
in the wake of the 2021 Ledger breach.
Related: Violent crypto robberies on the rise: Six
attacks that targeted investors
Meanwhile, inclusion in the S&P 500 means that “index funds,
including those managed by BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street,
must now allocate capital to Coinbase,” Habibi told Cointelegraph.
“This means billions of dollars in passive investment will flow
into a crypto-native business.”
$10 billion in new capital inflows?
How much money could flow Coinbase’s way? Passive investing
(e.g., investing in an ETF that mirrors the S&P 500) has
proliferated in recent years. S&P DJII estimated in 2024 that roughly $10 trillion is now
passively tracking the S&P 500.
If Coinbase gets only a 0.1% weighting — a share that Habibi
thinks reasonable — it could reap $10 billion in potential capital
flows without a single investor actively choosing crypto
exposure.
S&P
Dow Jones Indices Annual Survey of Assets. Source:
S&P Global
Institutional acceptance is arguably the bigger story here,
Habibi continued. Coinbase’s inclusion in the index signals that
public markets now reward not just growth, but regulatory
compliance, operational maturity and long-term vision in the crypto
space. She added:
The move paves the
way for other crypto firms — e.g., Circle, Chainalysis, Fireblocks
— to aim for public listings and eventual index inclusion,
potentially triggering a new wave of institutional-grade crypto
finance companies.
It may be premature to speak yet about a convergence of the
crypto and TradFi economic sectors, however, as some are doing.
“Crypto, overall, is still a very small fraction of the overall
economy,” Seoyoung Kim, associate professor of finance at Santa
Clara University, told Cointelegraph. “I think the greater
convergence coming ahead will be increasing institutional adoption
of blockchain-based protocols and tokenization.”
A convergence of economies?
Others disagree. “We have been talking about TradFi-crypto
convergence for quite some time,” Owen Lau, executive director at
Oppenheimer & Co, told Cointelegraph. “It is happening and will
continue to happen. Robinhood/Bitstamp, Kraken/Ninja Trader and
Ripple/Hidden Road are good examples.”
“We’re not quite at full convergence, but we’re definitely past
the separation phase,” opined Kennard. He, too, referenced crypto
ETFs but also pointed to recent events, like Galaxy Digital’s
listing on the Nasdaq exchange this month and Coinbase’s role as
custodian for multiple ETFs, demonstrating that TradFi firms are
now looking to crypto-native firms for some infrastructure needs.
“Regulatory clarity is still emerging, but institutional rails are
being laid fast,” said Kennard.
More equity listings mean that crypto companies can tap markets
as a source of liquidity, but that doesn’t necessarily involve a
convergence of financial channels, stated Interactive Brokers’
Sosnick. “Convergence will occur when a traditional finance company
truly adopts crypto as a means of payment.”
Related:
Senate stablecoin vote splits Democrats amid concerns
over corruption
Still, Habibi pointed to convergence in infrastructure
solutions, like JPMorgan’s Onyx platform that is being used to
settle billions in intraday repo transactions using blockchain
technology, Nasdaq’s digital asset custody infrastructure launch
and PayPal’s launch of its PayPal USD (PYUSD) stablecoin, which integrates crypto rails and
consumer fintech.
“These examples underscore a shift in which crypto and TradFi
are no longer competing but co-evolving. Crypto-native firms are
beginning to resemble traditional financial institutions in
structure, while banks are adopting decentralized technologies to
improve efficiency, reduce settlement friction, and expand asset
reach,” Habibi explained.
Who is next?
Now that Coinbase has broken ground, should one expect other
crypto firms to gain S&P 500 inclusion soon? Maybe
not.
A large market capitalization is needed to join the S&P 500,
but that alone is not sufficient. There are other criteria. A
candidate must have been profitable in the most recent year and
quarter to qualify, for instance. “Galaxy Digital is newly listed
[on Nasdaq], but [it still] needs consistent profitability,” said
Kennard. “Marathon Digital, Riot Platforms and Strategy are often
cited but may be a little early in their journey.”
Lau didn’t expect any crypto-native companies to join the
S&P 500 anytime soon, though it could happen in the next two to
three years, he said. Rhoads ventured, “I would not go as far as
stating this is the beginning of multiple crypto-related firms
joining the S&P 500, as the new members often replace a firm in
same industry — in this case, COIN replaced Discover
Financial.”
Strategy (MSTR) is a possible candidate. It easily has the
necessary market capitalization, but it’s struggling to meet the
index’s earnings requirements. “I don’t see MSTR making the cut,”
said Kim.
“I’m not sure who would be next — even Gemini (still private)
seems far off based on valuations from their last funding rounds,”
Kim continued. “It’s really tough to make it into the S&P 500,
and so we’ll likely see existing S&P 500 firms increasingly
adopt blockchain/crypto services before we see a true-blue crypto
firm — i.e., one that started as a crypto firm — enter the
index.”
Time will tell, but for now, “I’m not aware of any crypto-linked
companies with sufficient market cap and consistent earnings that
meet SPX criteria,” concluded Sosnick.
Magazine:
TradFi is building Ethereum L2s to tokenize trillions
in RWAs: Inside story
...
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