Cheeky Pint - Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong on bitcoin going to $1 million, electing a pro-crypto Congress, and Jamie Dimon
Episode Date: August 20, 2025Brian Armstrong joins John Collison to talk about what’s happening behind the scenes at Coinbase: battling North Korean hackers, war stories from early scaling, confronting people who won�...�t use AI to code, Coinbase becoming people’s primary financial account, and why banks are now embracing crypto.Full episode transcript on Substackhttps://cheekypint.substack.com/p/coinbase-ceo-brian-armstrong-on-bitcoinTimestamps(00:00) Intro(01:14) How Coinbase won the exchange market(06:22) Losing money on every bitcoin purchase(10:54) North Korean hackers(14:54) The Everything Exchange(17:39) Crypto will be bigger than gold(19:22) Stablecoin adoption(23:28) Jamie Dimon and big banks on crypto(26:44) Coinbase as your primary financial account(27:53) Neobanks(29:41) Bitcoin going to $1 million(33:16) Crypto in an investment portfolio(34:43) GENIUS Act(37:10) Electing a pro-crypto Congress(45:24) Reforming accredited investor rules(48:33) Squashing scams(50:11) Bitcoin preserving the American experiment(57:09) Balaji Srinivasan(01:01:05) The mission-first company announcement(01:05:50) How does Coinbase focus?(01:07:44) Venture bets and Brian vetoing USDC(01:12:02) Brian’s AI coding mandate(01:15:13) Advice for Stripe
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Companies are a reflection of their founders.
In many ways, probably you don't even realize.
I think this is...
Within the first few weeks of us, working together,
he came back to me at one point.
He was like, I'm pretty sure we're losing money
every time someone buys Bitcoin.
And he walked me through on the whiteboard,
and he was right.
There's the top five or 10 fiat currencies.
But the long tail, the other 150 or so government currencies,
I think they probably should get replaced.
If the US is going to lose the reserve currency status,
I'd rather people went to Bitcoin than to the Chinese Yuan.
I don't think we can serve these sad pints.
I'm sorry.
It's not meeting the stripe quality bar.
Isn't there some ethos and stripe
about the details really, really, really matter?
They do.
But you deserve a delicious, creamy pint.
Not this monstrosity.
I actually was a bartender in grad school.
I should know how to do this.
Brian Armstrong is the co-founder and CEO of Coinbase,
one of the world's largest crypto exchanges.
Founded in 2012, just earlier this year,
they became the first crypto company
to be added to the S&P 500.
Here is.
John, good to see you.
You too.
It feels like a good time.
to do this and take stock where Stripe was, you know, we launched in 2011,
Coinbase was founded in 2012, kind of grew up at the same time.
Coinbase just added the S&P 500, Genius Act just packed the past.
So I have a good moment to step back and take stock.
Yeah.
As you look back on it, like when I think about crypto in, say, the, you know,
2014-2015 era, it was such a red ocean.
There was so many different competitors, and you guys beat so many people to get here.
Like, as you look back on it, how do coin-based win?
Well, yeah, it has been a long journey, and I remember actually seeing you guys go through YC
and everything was very inspiring for me.
It was like, okay, maybe a fintech company could be built in this area.
So I had a lot of aspiration to go through YC in part by seeing what Stripe did.
And you're right, in those early days, it was a wild west.
I mean, I had to go to the early Bitcoin meetups, and there was, like, brilliant cryptography PhDs
and also just anarchists.
And like, it was really, I mean, one of the first meetups I went to in San Francisco for Bitcoin,
a guy there told me he was starting his own religion.
You know, I thought it was a little off topic, but somehow it all worked together in his mind.
So we've come together from these kind of early days, you know, which remind me of the Chaos Computer Club kind of equivalent.
And I think Coinbase made a couple decisions there that helped us ride through.
One was that we decided to follow a regulated approach, which meant working with the United States government and going get money transfer into licenses,
which I remember the anarchist crowd at that time.
They just considered kind of selling out?
It was a little bit.
I mean, one guy I remember, I had just gone to like meet with some banks or something
like that, so I was wearing like a suit.
And I came to the Bitcoin meetup and the guy was like...
You're in the suit.
Yeah, he was like, you look like a banker.
And I was like, no, no, I'm like a software guy, trust me.
I think the other thing that we did was we tried to stack up as many credibility
indicators as we could.
So one of them was like getting accepted to Y Combinator.
That led to us getting a bank relationship in the U.S.
time when that was very difficult to do with Silicon Valley Bank, of all places, getting the money
transmitter licenses. So there was a period there in the U.S. where we were kind of, I think,
the only U.S. company that had a bank partnership, so it was easy to connect your bank count to buy
Bitcoin. And that really allowed us to get started in a way that nobody else could catch up.
So you were more credential versus, who were the competitors at the time? Was it Mount Gox?
Who were you competing against for consumers?
Yeah. I mean, it's been so long. So Mount Gox was in Japan, which of course blew up.
there was a company called Trade Hill in San Francisco, which probably could have been a big exchange,
but it didn't hit some of those milestones.
I mean, there's so many of them along the way.
I couldn't even probably name all of them.
And there was actually a Bitcoin conference in San Jose, California in 2012, I believe,
that was kind of iconic in hindsight.
Like the Winklevosh brother showed up, and I met Vitalik Buter in there for the first time.
He had not invented Ethereum yet.
And I remember people looking around the room, they're like, this is, it felt so small time.
Some of the talks only had five people show up to it,
and we had this little booth with T-shirts.
Pauli Fetalek working on before Ethereum.
He was a writer at Bitcoin Magazine.
He was actually a very good writer.
You see it in his how he leads the Ethereum movement.
Yeah, exactly.
The Philosopher King.
Anyway, I don't know if there's a lesson to draw from this,
but I think being early on some of these tech trends,
you don't want to jump in and be like the 42nd AI company or something.
You want to jump into something when you think it's cool,
nobody else thinks it's cool.
And it's, I guess Paul Graham has that thing, right?
You'd rather have like a thousand people who really love your product than like much people don't care.
So that's where we were.
Nobody took seriously what we were doing, us, Coinbase or the entire industry at that time.
And can you describe being the more buttoned up player, having the money transmitted license, having bank partnerships?
Did that help you win because you were able to build product that other people weren't able to follow you with?
or to help you win because for consumers,
it gave you a brand and a trust that allowed them to choose you?
I think it was both.
I mean, yeah, it allowed us to launch products that others couldn't.
It allowed us to not get shut down.
Does other people get shut down?
Yeah, they either just, they got cease and desist letters,
they couldn't afford illegal bills,
they got shut down by getting hacked, basically.
We had a couple of close calls in the early days
where we were not the mature company we are today,
and we had people trying to break into our systems.
I can tell you about some of those close calls if you want.
But we were able to get just enough good talent in the door due to the credibility indicators.
And, like, you know, and I think we, by the way, some of the other companies at that time were totally anonymous.
These people were telling me, well, I'm going to, I don't want to put my name on this website because it's against the ethos of crypto.
And in my view, I was like, if we're going to raise money, be regulated, I was like, how are you going to be anonymous forever?
If this gets big enough, someone's going to come knocking on your door.
And so I wasn't afraid to put my name on it and say, like, you know, I'm a U.S. citizen.
I live in the United States.
I'm doing this for the right reason. I'm here for the long term.
And companies are a reflection of their founders, right?
Stripe's very much a reflection of you and Patrick, in bits and pieces of you in many ways
probably you don't even realize.
You're in a pub after all.
Yeah, Irish pub. This is one small example, yeah.
But the same thing was, I think, was true of Coinbase with Fred and Ersom and I.
It was really a derivation of our DNA, which was, you know, many things.
But one of them was we were actually kind of legitimate.
And we were trustworthy and we were doing it for the right reason.
for the long term. And that kind of it for a lot.
Fred had worked in the financial world before.
No, you were at Airbnb before. Had you worked in finance at all before?
No. I had studied computer science and economics. I'd worked pretty much as a software engineer.
I'd tried doing another startup that was more of a base hit, not really didn't work.
Fred got a computer science degree in economics too at Duke, but he went into FX trading at Goldman.
So when I first met him, I was kind of like, okay, the guy knows how to write code. He has a CS degree,
but he knows something about finance.
And of course, within the first few weeks of us trying working together,
he came back to me at one point.
He was like, I'm pretty sure we're losing money
every time someone buys Bitcoin.
I was like, how could that possibly be?
And he walked him to throw on the whiteboard, and he was right.
So I was like, hmm, okay, complimentary skill sets.
Be one of the business model is not going to work.
You need some of optimizations.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's wild.
You're saying some of the close calls.
I think one thing people don't realize is, you know,
they think when a startup isn't working that it's bad and stressful
because no one's buying your product, and that is true.
but when a startup really is working,
it is also bad and stressful in a way
because you're being pulled along by forces,
and it's not obvious that you can keep up.
And so, yeah, what were some of the close calls?
Yeah, I mean, so I'll give you a couple examples on the first version of the app.
I had created this simple hot wallet that was live on the servers, right?
And I remember telling people, this app is an alpha,
like don't store any money here.
You're not willing to lose.
And the company had raised about 150K or so at that point.
from Y Combinator.
And so as early users came on site,
they kept depositing more money,
even though despite these warnings all over the app,
and it was getting closer and closer
to being like 150K.
And I felt like if we lost all the money,
I would want to be able to pay it back
or else we'd be insolvent.
You were tracking corp cash versus,
like how much money the company had
versus user deposits,
and you didn't want user deposits
to outstrip how much money Coinbase had.
Exactly.
And I calculated at one point the growth of the deposits
and how much money we had,
And I was like, hey, we have about eight weeks to put this onto some new system.
I had the vague sense, like, we need to move the money off the internet, like the cold storage.
And so I didn't know how to architect one.
I mean, I'd study computer science.
I took a security class.
I had basic understandings of cryptography.
But I never built like a really key storage solution or anything like that.
So I called up like two friends of mine.
I was like, I need a crash course, how to do this.
How would you architect it?
I remember asking one of them, like, how long you think it'll take to build this?
And he said a team of like 10 people would take probably a couple years to really validate it and everything.
And I was like, we have like eight weeks.
And he was like, oh, well, you're in trouble.
And so anyway, I tagged one of the other engineers on our team, and we basically just got to work coding up this, the next generation, the first generation of the cold storage architecture.
And we were sleep deprived and we made some tradeoffs that we thought were reasonable to get it there in time.
But it worked.
And it was like one of the most kind of do-a-dive moments where if we had waited longer and the company had gotten hacked, we wouldn't exist here today, right?
There was another example like that where, yeah, we were sitting there at lunch one day in San Francisco, and someone on their computer noticed, and there's a lot of refunds going out.
And we quickly realized someone had hacked into one of our customer support accounts and was just issuing themselves refunds as fast as they could.
And I remember we shut down the whole website and we kind of figured out how they accessed that account, managed to block it, came back online maybe 12 or 24 hours later.
And we patched it.
we went back to work, and I realized if we had been asleep when that hacker started doing it,
we would have been insolvent by morning. We only lost like 50K or something in that incident,
but it was pure luck that we were in specific time, San Francisco. They started doing it in a place
where we noticed it. So there was moments like that, in hindsight, very scary. They were coin flip.
And there was like, there was three or four coin flips like that, maybe, that not all of them
were cyber-related. But yeah, you're right. Once it started to really work, I think there were
other challenges about keeping up. I mean, one was just the level of customer support tickets,
coming in and we didn't have a customer support team. So nights and weekends, you know, we would
9 p.m. to midnight, we'd answer all the support tickets after doing the other work. Yeah, I mean,
at some point there was like 10,000, 20,000, 30,000 unread support tickets and people were starting
to get really angry and frustrated with us. And so we realized, okay, we have to hyperscale here.
How do we, how do we build a customer support team in the next seven days or something, right?
And somebody on our team made this actually a 10-question quiz, because we couldn't interview all
these people that fast. And we had these people apply online.
take this quiz. It was a really hard quiz about knowledge of crypto and all these things.
We hired, did like five-minute interviews with a bunch of them and hired them in and we started
to get up to speed. So there was a lot of problems like that that we were just figuring out along
the way by the seat of our pants. What does the general tech public not appreciate about the
cybercrime landscape? Hmm. One is that there's a lot of North Green agents trying to work at
these companies. In the US or remotely from North Korea? For the most part remotely as far as we can tell.
The remote work revolution.
Yeah, I mean, it does bring another vector.
But, yeah, DPRK is very interested in stealing crypto.
You'd think that, well, we can collaborate with law enforcement.
And, you know, we get these, like, dossiers of like, okay, this is a known actor.
We share sometimes other companies.
But it feels like there's 500 new people graduating every quarter from some kind of school they have that just their whole job.
And in many of these cases, it's not the individual person's fault.
their family will be coerced or detained if they don't cooperate.
And so it's actually they're like, they're the victim as well in many cases.
But yeah, they're interviewing for these roles.
I mean, we've had to do a number of things along the way, right?
Well, first, some of these people are being coached offline as they're on the camera.
And so we force them to turn on the camera and prove they're not AI.
But we also started requiring everybody to like come to the U.S. for orientation and just really to access any kind of
sensitive system, like fingerprinting them, making sure. Really, anybody with sensitive access,
we make sure has U.S. citizenship and family in country because you don't want someone to feel
like they can flee and then have no fear of extradition or, you know, these kind of things.
So, yeah, we've had to kind of adapt all of this on the DPRK side. The other thing that was
surprising to me is the willingness of these threat actors to try to bribe our customer support
agents. And our customer support agents work in these facilities that are pretty locked down and they
have a Chromebook that is pretty locked down. But in some cases, you know, they've been offered
hundreds of thousands of dollars to take, like, smuggle in a personal phone and take photos of a screen
or something, which you'd think, wow. Okay. And so we've really had to lock down the kind of access
that these agents have. We've started to move more of it to the U.S. in Europe. Like, we just opened a new
customer support facility in Charlotte, North Carolina. And really started to make a lot of
a deterrent in the sense of when we catch people doing this and we red team it consistently,
we don't walk them out the door, they go to jail.
You know, and we try to make it very clear that this is like, you're destroying the rest
of your life by taking this, even if you think whatever it's some life-changing amount of money,
it's not worth going to jail. So these are the kind of things we've had to deal with now,
and I'm sure the stakes will just keep getting higher.
Yeah. So more proof of physical presence, more compartmentalization,
and more deterrent effect through aggressive prosecution. Good summary. Yeah.
It feels like the proof of physical presence is going to become a bigger deal in a world of AI deepfakes,
just higher stakes for all this kind of cybercrime and stuff,
where in a weird way, yeah, maybe you see certain areas where remote work goes backwards.
People are saying, oh, no, you know, we want to do our customer service in the United States
or other examples like that.
But, yeah, it feels like the physical presence is becoming more relevant and not less.
Yeah.
The other thing we're doing, by the way, people may have seen this too,
but we turn the tables and we're actually going after threat actors too.
Like we put out a $20 million bounty for information leading to the arrest
or conviction of these folks who recently convicted an attack on our customers,
who we made whole, by the way.
But yeah, we've gotten a lot of inbound tips from that,
and we're having a fun time working with law enforcement on tracking folks down.
So, you know, I think that's the ultimate deterrent is not just not going after insiders or something,
but after the threat actors themselves.
And we need to be a hard target.
Who after the DPRK are the biggest troublemakers?
You know, there's actually some groups that are in the U.S.
And they're usually like younger people in their 20s
that are caught up in these hacker groups.
Some of them are more mobile.
They're in Eastern Europe.
So sometimes it's about getting them into a U.S. extradition country
or sometimes they're already here.
I'll say a bit of an inventory of everything that's happening in crypto,
and that would probably be helpful for the discussion.
And so as I look at what's working, store value is for sure working in a big way,
24-7 trading of assets, including, you know, I would include meme coins.
There is some success in payments so far, but I think both our companies are seeing that really ramp up.
Like, I think we're very optimistic on the just payments volumes in crypto, especially stable coins,
over the next five years.
Global access to the dollar is a big thing.
What else would you include in that list?
Yeah.
I think you hit the big ones.
You know, prediction markets did, I'd say,
enter mainstream consciousness during the last election.
For sure, that's a good one.
And the volumes have continued.
And there's some more things on the horizon we could talk about,
but I think you nailed the big ones.
Crypto is, I guess, load bearing for prediction markets,
like we just didn't have them pre-crypto?
Yes and no, actually.
I mean, there were prediction markets, I think, before crypto.
And there's an open question kind of currently legally in the U.S.
about if you build them entirely on chain with self-cissory wallets,
are they not financial services? In which case, they're much more permissionless about how they can be
created, which is true in self-consolial wallets and other areas. So anyway, that's another great one.
A cool thing about the trading use case, too, by the way, of course, is that every asset class is now coming on chain, right?
So it's not people just trading crypto. They're also, they're going to be trading stocks soon,
and private companies are doing capital formation and commodities and FX markets, debt instruments,
treasuries. So I think every asset class is coming on chain, and we're really trying to lean
into that as well with what we, we kind of coined this term, everything exchange. So we're trying to
literally be a liquid market that's global for every asset class. And I think that'll be
exciting in a variety of ways, like, both more international reach. Like there's a lot of people in
these countries who can't, they have high demand for U.S. assets. Like they want to invest in
NVIDIA and these things. But unless you're a wealthy person, usually in some of these markets,
you can't get like a U.S. brokerage account opened. And then the 24-7, the fractional
shares and you can start to do things like with perpetual futures and other interesting things.
So you think for, say, stocks, but you know, there's these ADR's American depository receipts,
where if you want to, if you're an American person and you want to buy a German stock or a
Canadian stock, it's actually kind of weirdly tricky to do so, so you end up buying a derivative
and you think on-chain is just a better derivative of that?
Yeah, I think a lot of those will get tokenized. They are already in some ways.
And then private company capital formation or even people doing anything.
They want to raise money for a real estate development or to make a film.
I think people will eventually be able to do more, some novel things around governance, too,
where let's say you really want to only have long-term holders of your stock be voters.
You can put that in the smart contract and say you had to have held this for at least a year to be able to vote.
There's interesting things you could do around that as well.
Is tokenization of access, I was going to ask you, like what the next big use case that starts working is,
would that be your vote, or are there other next big use cases that you would point to?
tokenization. Yeah. I mean, I think the big ones right now are, yeah, trading in payments.
I think Bitcoin as a store of value that's inflation resistant is not to be underestimated.
That's also like a $20 trillion opportunity with gold. You know, gold is a comparable, but better than gold, I think.
Gold is a $20 trillion market cap? Yeah. And Bitcoin is one and a half?
It's like two or three or something. Yeah. Yeah. And I think it'll eventually be bigger than gold.
Yes. If that's all crypto ever was, that's already enormous. But I think,
Yeah, we're starting to see borrowing and lending, capital formation.
And then people doing like decentralized social media, too, is pretty interesting.
We just launched a prototype of this, or a beta of...
I watched the base event. I saw it. Yeah. Yeah. So that was cool.
Now people are essentially posting content and people can...
Every post on social is its own coin. And you, the creator, have your own coin, which value flows up.
If people can buy it. If they like the post, they can reshare it and earn a share of the economics.
they can remix it.
So you see sometimes on the internet people have like a meme template and there's a thousand.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it could actually, all the value can actually float back to the content creator.
So that's an interesting primordial soup where some cool ideas are happening.
I don't know exactly how it'll play out, but the base app's been fun.
There's a bunch of people on the wait list.
Those are some good new use cases.
And yeah, I think both of us would say payments actually qualifies for a major new use case
because it's true.
Like over the last 10 years, it's been pretty much just kind of the crypto-enthusiest use case.
Whereas now, at least we are seeing a bunch of mainstream use.
Yeah.
I was excited to see you guys coming to the space
because it was super legitimizing, frankly.
And I think the tech was like slowly getting there.
And there was like a scalability issue.
There was a usability issue with like,
are you sending some random string of characters
or are they said a human readable name?
The wallets need to get better.
Like, crypto should be the easiest way to pay.
What's kind of your current thinking on, like,
what's the next blocker to,
stable coin adoption. I think training consumer familiarity is going to be the big one. And right now,
one of the places where Stabilchen usage is most interesting is in cross-border money movement,
where it's also a real world problem. Like, if you want to send $2 from the U.S. to Turkey,
it's actually not even really a thing you can do. Like there is no product that historically fills that
space and crypto makes that easy.
And so in a lot of creative economy use cases or things like that, we're seeing a lot of pull.
I think what's interesting is you get this cycle of the apps getting better and consumer
behavior coming along with it.
And so an example that might be, if you look at QR codes, the QR code as a technology has
existed for decades.
It's a super old technology.
But it required two things.
It required Apple to not.
natively include QR code scanning in the camera app on the iPhone.
So if you just like point the camera app on the iPhone towards a QR code,
it kind of did the right thing that happened in the late 2010s.
And then with COVID, there was lots more focus on, you know,
touchless experiences and things like that.
And so I feel like in the US, people really got familiar with QR codes during COVID.
So again, that technology existed for a long time,
but it required the consumer apps to get good in the form of the iPhone supporting it
and consumers to be kind of wired to expect it and use it.
And I feel like we actually still don't have both of those for the stablecoin use case.
Because we want us to encourage stablecoin adoption,
we have our coffee station downstairs on the first floor.
You could pay with crypto.
It's a super junky experience.
You know, because you always run into a bog or something like that.
And that will get good.
And so as consumers get familiar and as all the app experiences get really smooth,
then that feels to us like it's going to drive a sharp rise in usage.
I mean, is that scan?
Totally.
Yeah, I think you're right.
It'll be interesting to see if QR is what is needed here
or if it's like a tap-to-pay-N-FC thing.
Sorry, now you can't QR just a metaphor for like this wave of.
But, yeah, I agree.
Tap-to-pay NFC feels like it would be a very plausible ingredient,
you know, some better OS support.
I guess now with the new iOS rules around NFC,
you maybe can use the NFC APIs in the Coinbase app, question mark?
Well, we've seen some good demos of TAP to Pay.
I think the thing of that part is opening up.
The secure enclave on the device is another story.
Yeah.
Yeah, we'll keep working on that one.
Yeah.
But yeah, I think you're right.
It's, you know, we debated, like, mailing these, like, stickers to just flood the zone of, like, a city to test it out.
Yes.
You know, seeing which merchants want to accept it.
And a lot of the use case, it is happening across borders,
happening in more internet-native applications where crypto is the only way to pay because it's a global group of people coming together into some community.
It'd be a little weird to use.
like one country's currency.
Yes.
But brick and mortar will probably be like a later adopter, is my guess.
But still, like, they don't want to pay two to three percent on, you know, the fees they
can save money.
So, and give some of it back to the customer, too.
Yeah, I agree.
It feels like the digital use case is where it'll roll out first.
And, you know, we're starting to roll out more and more of the Stripe checkout experiences
pay with crypto as an option.
You know, there's a lot of brick and mortar retailers that accept AliPay or accept, you know,
JCB. And obviously, that's a pretty small, you know, that's a niche use case accepting
JCB, you know, the Japanese card brand in the United States, but it's like a large
enough constituency to be worth it. And it feels like analogous here. Once you get it above
some minimum penetration, yeah, it's not, everyone's paying with it, but it's just not worth
not accepting it. So when you make of all the banks starting to embrace crypto, you know, so
Jamie Diamond said previously, Bitcoin is a fraud, it's worse than tulip bulbs. If I was the government,
I'd close it down now, and now, of course, they're launching JPMD, their tokenized dollar.
And so it's just been an interesting reversal.
I'm curious what you make of all about across banks generally.
Yeah, well, I think ultimately they're responding to customer demand.
So if their clients want it, you know, they're going to support it.
And I feel like banks have had this like back and forth with crypto, where they'll say,
you know, we're not so sure about Bitcoin, but we like blockchain technology.
Maybe we could make a closed network for interbank settlement.
Or maybe, you know, they don't like paying swift fees.
So they are excited about it in the abstract, and they've run a lot of pilots.
But I haven't seen them like full on embrace it, right?
And it's a little bit of that innovator's dilemma type thing, Clay Christensen, where just culturally, it's so hard to get an organization where they're making tons of money off the traditional system.
Anything they do in crypto would just be this fraction of a share, but it comes with all this risk and complexity.
So they don't get a lot of people who come in with that mindset.
They don't have a lot of DNA inside the company that wants to build a crypto.
Now, I think just like the New York Times when the Internet came out or something,
like some of these local newspapers are not going to adapt to the new system,
and they're going to fade away.
But a lot of the best ones will adapt to it, right?
In the same way that there's websites now for these media companies,
the banks are going to embrace crypto.
The payment companies, you know, Visa MasterCard are running good pilots on stable coins.
You know, obviously I think Stripes jumped in with both feet,
which is really, really smart, and you've caused a lot of other people to,
wake up and do the same thing. So I think the smartest ones will adapt. I think that's good.
I think from a coin-based point of view, I mean, we increasingly want to be people's primary financial
account, right? As crypto kind of eats financial services, I think for some of our customers,
we can be a bank replacement, right? And they can manage their trading, their payments, their direct
deposit, like they have a credit card, they have a loan. And a lot of them, actually, by the way,
they won't even really care that it's crypto. They just want the best financial services. So
if it's the cheapest way to send money to their family overseas or they can get the best rewards on this card or whatever it is, that's what we ultimately want to provide to them.
And I think the banks will have to compete in that new environment. Are they going to be an infrastructure layer powering some of these new fintech apps that the next generation of kids thinks of as their primary financial account? Or are they going to adapt to the new world and build their own apps or embrace crypto? Like I said, the smartest banks will do it and many will get left behind. And that's good. That's free market competition.
Totally. Companies don't disrupt. Consumers, you know, cause disruption by voting with their, you know, their feet to use something else.
Has anyone impressed you on the banking side of things just in terms of being forward thinking?
Well, yeah, a number of them. I mean, I actually think Jamie Diamond is a great leader, very smart, even his comments on Bitcoin.
I don't really agree with, but he's a great guy, and we work with them a lot.
You know, I think Santander has been really great. There are some banks that have really embraced.
crypto like Citizens Bank and there's Cross River and, you know, Silicon Valley Bank had a love-of-hate
relationship. They had their own risk to manage. Yeah, there's a bunch. Yeah. Yeah. What does
Coinbase becoming people's primary financial account look like? I mean, it means that we just
have a bigger responsibility and share of people's financial lives. So it's not just going to be
coming into trade crypto. It's like, okay, maybe I started with that, but I have a lot of crypto here.
Okay, I can get the best rate on a loan to do a mortgage or whatever because I have a lot of assets here. It's collateral. Or it could mean that I can use a Bitcoin credit card and get 4% back in Bitcoin as rewards when I spend, right? Or it could mean that it's very easy to send money overseas instantly for less than a cent. So we need to do a good job of leveraging the benefits of crypto to update the financial system and not make it just crypto for crypto's sake. Because the early users of coin.
base were just crypto diehards. And that's great. We've gotten to maybe six or seven percent of
the world has used crypto now, kind of like the early 2000s for the internet. And we now need to get
to about a billion or half the world eventually using it to really increase economic freedom globally.
So it's got to be about something more than the technology. It's got to be about just it's faster,
it's cheaper, it's better. It helps me get done what I want to get done.
The reason I ask is because I observe the growth of neobanks outside the U.S.
you know, New Bank is obviously taken over in Brazil.
Revolut is the fastest growing bank in Europe.
And in the United States, the largest consumer banks are basically the same,
you know, a very similar, recognizable set of characters from the 1970s.
And maybe that will still be true in 10 years' time.
Or, again, maybe things will really have shaken up.
And so I'm very curious what the Neobank Revolution in the United States looks like.
Well, I think that's a great way to phrase.
I probably should have phrased it that way, actually, when I was describing it.
But yeah, I think some people are calling them like stablecoin neobanks or super apps, right?
There's a lot of terms you could come up for this.
But I think that's our opportunity.
By the way, as a technicality, I don't think we're actually going to go get a banking license
because I don't know how deep people want to go on the details here.
But the core thing of banking license allows you to do is not have all the money there.
It's called fractional reserve, right?
which is an interesting business model,
but it also comes with such heavyweight regulation
that it makes it much harder to really innovate on products
and ship quickly.
And so we actually don't really want to be a bank.
You want to be fully backed as opposed to be doing fractional.
Yeah, 100% reserve, not fractional reserve,
which is actually safer for the customer.
Sure, yeah.
You can't have a bank run.
You can even store the assets like, you know,
the stable coins, especially in backed in U.S. treasuries,
things that are bankruptcy remote, etc.
So there's really strong protections you can put in there.
And then I think that that'll allow us to continue to innovate
and provide the best customer experience.
So yeah, ultimately, I think it could be a bank replacement
for many people.
Let's call it a – I like your term.
The U.S. needs a neobank since the rest of the world
seem to keep having them.
Yeah.
What is your prediction for the 10-year rate of growth,
like average annual growth in the Bitcoin price?
You know,
The rough idea I have in my head is like we'll see a million dollar Bitcoin by 2030.
And there's high error bars around these things.
But, you know, just to give you a couple of data points, right?
It's like we're starting to see regulatory clarity emerge in the United States, which I think is a bellwether for the rest of the G20.
We have the Genius Act passed now for stable coins, but this market structured bill is being debated in the Senate.
Fingers crossed, something could happen by the end of this year.
That would be a huge milestone.
The United States government now has a strategic Bitcoin reserve.
So that is, if you'd ask me five years ago, that would have been kind of.
of like vision board, someone would have said, you're crazy, like the United States government's not
going to officially hold Bitcoin.
But if they do that, which there's now an executive order to do, I think a bunch of other
countries are going to do that.
We've seen a lot of interest from sovereigns, right?
Coinbase actually provides crypto services to about 140 government entities, believe it or not,
like at both federal, state, local and internationally.
So governments are now getting more and more engaged in this.
And you can imagine the big pools of capital around the world.
then there's a lot of, so I don't see the regulatory thing going away.
That was one of the big risks is like, is the government going to shut this down?
I think that risk has been severely diminished.
And then, you know, is there going to be some flaw found in the Bitcoin Protocol?
I think that's been severely combed over at this point.
You need to make sure we upgrade it to a post-quantum cryptography.
Are elliptic curves already post-quantum?
Or no?
They are theoretically, I believe.
Really good to nail that down.
It's a little untested, but yeah, I believe there is a path.
where the Bitcoin core team and Ethereum and Solana, everyone,
they're looking at proposals now to upgrade to even more.
Definitely post-contactos.
Yes, yes.
So, yeah, I think the list of kind of risks is getting diminished.
And at the same time, the amount of demand,
like the amount of institutional money just sitting on the sidelines,
waiting for this next bill to land, you know, is these are the,
the big institutions I talk to, they're holding 1% of the portfolio in Bitcoin.
And I'm like, what would it be to 5 to 10?
And they say, regulatory clarity.
That's it.
So I think we'll continue to see huge inflows of capital.
The ETFs have been huge.
When people talk about the institutions on the sidelines, I think the gold comparison is a very apt one in that it's a non-productive store of wealth.
I mean, that is a compliment, not an insult.
But depending on what you mean by institutions, I don't think like the major sovereign wealth funds or, you know, mutual funds or whatever, hold a lot of gold today, I guess, I don't know.
And so doesn't it seem like you're substituting the gold buying, but it would be kind of unusual for those large institutions to buy a non-cash-flowing asset?
Well, it depends on their strategy, but there is a theory that in a diversified portfolio, you should have some percentage of it, five or ten in commodities or species or whatever.
But I think there's a good bet to be, you know, BlackRock has actually published some reports and research on this.
about how they believe crypto should be a part of every healthy diversified portfolio at this point.
It's like, you know, because it has interesting inversely correlated aspects with other assets.
And it's changing over time, by the way, as it evolves.
But I think that it will be sitting here in five or ten years.
And most wealth managers or maybe sovereigns like in who hold a traditional diversified portfolio will include one to ten percent like crypto.
If you didn't want to put a fraction of your portfolio into crypto, should you dollar cost,
average into Bitcoin and maybe the other major coins, but not the mean coins in a market cap-weighted way?
Or I don't know.
What's the right investment strategy if you want to put some money into crypto?
Yeah.
Well, you know, with the caveat that I'm not giving investment advice and all that.
But, yeah, I mean, I think it's reasonable for people if they're just learning about any new thing, whether it's crypto.
You know, if you like it, put 1% of your net worth in something you're willing to lose and learn about it, right?
But within crypto, what should they put it into?
Oh.
Well, look, I think, you know, Bitcoin is a great place.
to start. We actually have something called the coin 50 index, which is the top 50 coins by market cap.
Market cap waited, I think that, you know, I'm not going to go down in like list specific coins,
but I think what you should do is you should hold Bitcoin. You can hold the index if you want as sort of a,
and then what you should do is go try and use crypto, spend it at a striped merchant, you know,
use your Coinbase credit card and post some content onto the base app and start to earn money in crypto,
So start to shop at a store that accepts it, whatever.
So I think that these are, people should go use crypto.
There's a part of it that's an investment.
And eventually, by the way, as these stocks get tokenized
and people want to get a loan,
they're going to be using crypto without even really knowing it underneath.
It's like they may not know how electricity works,
but they can turn on a light switch.
That makes sense.
So we have the Genius Act now.
Yeah.
What does it mean in particular?
Because, like, stable coins were legal before.
They're more enshrines now.
But just, what can we do now that we have the Genus Act that we couldn't before?
Well, okay, I'll start with Stablecoins and then what the Genius Act.
So Stablecoins, basically fast, cheap, global payments, right?
We can now do it under one second, one cent anywhere in the world.
That's unique.
I mean, there's no other payment rail that gets all three of those fast cheap.
So there's not a Genese Act thing.
You're just saying this is a thing you can now do with Stable Coens.
Yes, which I'm getting to your question too.
But, yeah, so there's no other payment rail that gets all three of those boxes checked.
There's some that are fast and cheap.
etc. So that's a huge deal. Now, what the Genius Act did was it said, if you want to call
yourself a stable coin and operate in the United States, there's certain requirements you have to
meet that make it more safe and trusted, right? One of them is 100% of the reserves have to be
backed in US dollars or short-term U.S. Treasuries. So you can't hold it in other risky things,
and you have to pass an audit once in a while and prove you're doing it. So it's kind of like
basic hygiene. So these are like the tactical things, but the bigger picture thing that it did
was it put a federal law in the books in a stamp of approval,
and it said, this is going to be trusted and legal and allowed and built in the United States.
And that created a huge demand from every company that deals with payments,
which is 100% of them.
And it said, we need to have a stable coin strategy.
We need to figure out what we're going to do here because it's now going to be a thing.
The U.S. government blessed it.
I've noticed so much more interest in the past two or three months.
It's incredible.
You've probably noticed something similar.
Yeah, it's a gold rush.
Like, everyone's kind of coming in trying to figure out what is going on with this
and how it can save their company money.
Like, there's lots of companies that try to pay out developers in these markets all over the world, right?
And kind of like the U.S. and Europe and a few other countries, it works pretty well.
And then there's a whole long-tailed countries where people just don't have access to good financial services.
And it's like kind of a black box, how much money shows up on the other side of this payment rail
with huge fees taken out.
And so if you have a global payment rail that's fast and cheap, it just, it democratizes.
access to financial services where anybody with a smartphone is on a more level playing field.
Their wealth can't be taken away from them, eroded away via inflation.
It's an incredible tool for progress and just property rights and sound money, economic freedom, basically.
So, yeah, that's what that opened up with stable coins.
Now we need to get the market structure bill done, which is all the non-stable coin crypto assets.
Got it. And so this is what's security, what's not, all that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
And you must have some funny stories from the passage of the Genius Act because
It was such a winding roller coaster wide.
Yeah.
So one thing I realized was like, for a long time, we were trying to make progress in D.C.
and try to advocate for legislation.
And nothing was ever happening, you know.
And I realized that people educated me about this a little bit.
And it's like, it's actually kind of rare for Congress to act.
In fact, somebody told me, Congress is really good at doing two things.
Nothing and overreacting, you know, in some crisis moment.
And so we realized at a certain point we had to.
generate a political will to do this. And we had like 50 million people in the U.S. who had used
crypto. And we said, well, let's try to get them organized. And so we funded this 501C4, I believe,
called standwithcropto.org. And we got two million of these folks in the U.S. to raise
their hand and say they wanted to elect pro-crypto candidates. I remember I was talking to our
policy team and I was like, well, let's put a scorecard, like A to F of every politician in this
upcoming election in last November. And, you know, our policy team is, their whole job is to build
relationships with politicians. So they're like, why don't we put a list of our crypto champions?
And I was like, no, I want to put a list of the crypto enemies, too, with like an F.
Who has an F? I could see them like get nervously perspiring. And I was like, no, let's put the
scorecards. Like someone needs to win an election. Someone needs to lose an election because of the
crypto vote. Crypto famously in terms of how it shows up in D.C. is much more pugnacious than,
say, tech was historically, where there's, you know, we have our friends.
friends, we have our enemies and things like that. So did that, and, you know, the standard with
crypto and Fairshake, I guess Fershake was a more relevant one in some of the recent battles.
Did that come from you, essentially, that we're not going to be pussy footing around here,
we're just going to, like, make clear how we feel? Well, there were a lot of people involved,
so I can't claim full credit. But what I saw a shift in the crypto industry was a lot of the
traditional policy advice that we got from people who worked in tech. And they all said, you know,
need to go in there and build relationships. So be the good cop. And then what you should do is
form a trade organization who can be bad cop. And they can go fight the battles and write the nasty
op-eds and try to, you know, whatever. For whatever reason, the people we kept getting into these
trade groups wanted to also be good cop. I kept thinking, you know, okay. And does the bad cop arise?
Yeah. Who's going to get into the political blood sport on X and like be tearing down these people,
you know, that are doing bad things? And they just wanted to have.
polite meetings behind closed doors.
And so I realized at a certain point
as the election was coming up,
I was like, if they don't do it,
maybe no one's going to do it.
So maybe we should do it, right?
And so I don't think we did anything like too crazy.
But what we did do is we,
for DC standards, this was crazy, right?
We came out and we said,
we're unequivocally pro-crypto.
We don't care if you're on the left or the right.
We want to elect pro-crypto candidates.
And, by the way, we want to get
anti-crypto candidates out of office.
And this really blew people's minds in DC because everything there is kind of partisan, right?
And so there was a feeding frenzy kind of coming up to the election where I was getting angry phone calls from both sides.
Like, how could you have given money to this person?
And we're like, well, they're pro-crypto.
And then I get a call from the other side like, how could you get them to that person?
I'm like, well, they're pro-crypto.
You're really a single-issue voter, yeah.
Yeah.
So on the one head, I was like, maybe we're just pissing off both sides.
And we'll have no friends after the election.
but on the other hand, you know, if you're taking flack, you're over the target.
Like I don't, we're explicitly at apolitical company, right?
But we are unapologetically pro-crypto.
So to me, it was very consistent.
And by the way, I had to remind many of them, apolitical does not mean 50-50.
It means we will elect a pro-crypto candidate regardless of what party they are,
or help donate to them or whatever, you know, regardless of which party they're in.
It's not necessarily going to be 50-50.
It might be 60-40 one way and 64-the-other way the next next election or whatever.
So that was a big mental shift, and it was kind of a contrarian thing.
And it helped elect the most pro-Crypto Congress.
So the work that we did along with a bunch of other people, it's not, I don't want to take credit for it, you know, a bunch of other companies worked on this.
That set up the most pro-C.'s Congress, which is now, I think, getting this legislation passed.
We made it clear to people in D.C. that if you're anti-Crypto, there's no constituency for that.
The American people want crypto.
And if you are pro-Crypto, it can help you get elected.
And so it's just good politics.
That was a novel idea.
Do you have issues now, once you get through the market structure bill, genius acts happened.
Do you have issues left?
Like, what do you?
Are you done going to D.C.?
Yeah, I mean, the upside to all of this, like, there was a lot of downside.
I mean, literally in the last.
Just took your neckouts, yeah.
Yeah, in the last administration, you know, they were trying to kill the whole industry, right?
But now that we've gotten to build a little bit of knowledge around policy, which can be dangerous,
to think you know too much, right? These things can go either way. And hopefully we'll get market
structure done. It does kind of start to make me wonder what else can we do to help update the financial
system. And our mission is around increasing economic freedom. So, you know, an example would be,
I think the accredited investor laws are kind of unfair, right? Only rich people can invest money to get
richer. That seems regressive, right? There could be a financial literacy test, for instance,
instead of having a certain net worth or income to become an accredited investor. Or, you know,
I like this idea.
I'm very excited about this idea of special economic zones, right?
And they've worked very well in China with Shenzhen and in the UAE in these places.
And, you know, we have so much regulation.
Why not have a sandbox for one area to test out new ideas where you could have one around
crypto or biotech or drones or, you know, supersonic aircraft?
So I think it'd be great to see if we could get, I don't know, 10 pieces of federal land in the United States
set up as different special economic zones.
and there's a company called Prospera,
which we actually invested in,
which has a prototype set up in South America,
but they're trying to do this now in the United States.
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of different areas.
Do you have any favorite pet policy issues
that you would kind of push for in D.C.?
Probably something with aviation.
Yeah, I'm just going to say.
This one happened, actually.
I'm super excited about these new mosaic rules that happened.
What is that?
Okay, so in general, there's been a lot of discussion
around the kind of deregulatory agenda of the current admin,
And you're like, okay, I mean, getting rid of outdated regulations seems great,
but you need to actually go do it and, you know, pass the new rules.
And they just did that in the aviation sector where you can't just, like, build a plane
and sell to the general public.
You have to go through a whole bunch of FAA approvals that were both a very cumbersome process
took multiple years and also a very prescriptive process where it's like,
you know, only have these kinds of engines or something like that.
And so famously, electric aircraft couldn't be certified because they said, you know,
an aircraft engine is like, you know, burns gasoline, it does this and that.
And they just came along with the Sean Duffe announced last month, this new regime for certifying
aircraft that is radically simpler.
I think we'll allow for much more kind of bottoms up innovation in that sector.
And so that would have been on my list, but it happened.
And so I think we'll see much more innovation in the light aviation sector, which obviously
the US used to be a leader in and stagnated over the past decades.
Yeah.
I think you might have seen, by the way, there was an exec order instructing the FAA to allow supersonic aircraft that overland in the U.S. that did not create an audible boom by some decibel.
Yes, yes.
That was really exciting. I mean, I'd love to fly places much faster.
And, you know, another one I think would be great is, like, it takes 10 years and $2 billion, apparently, to get a drug to market through the FDA.
I mean, and they have these three phases of trials around safety and efficacy.
I mean, I think it'd be amazing if you pass one phase one for safety.
why not let a doctor prescribe it, especially to somebody who is at end-of-life patient who has no other options?
Like, you know it's safe, you just don't know if it's effective, let a doctor make that call.
I mean, this would give you data much sooner on getting these drugs to market.
There's people, every year that goes by, there's people dying.
I mean, there's so many things like that that I think could be improved by, you know, making sensible deregulatory movements.
I think everyone agrees that the accredited investor rules are a bit silly, where they are,
are both exclusionary, if you don't meet the kind of minimum net worth test.
And as we have seen, wealthy people are not that necessarily savvy when it comes to making
investors.
You know, the list of Teranos investors was a who's who of various wealthy and accredited people.
At the same time, when it's just a free-for-all, you get a bunch of scams and frauds,
and the U.S. has some of the best capital markets in the world.
And as I look at what's happened to the crypto world where various pockets are more liberal,
I think the kind of whole phenomena of rugging and people looking to essentially engage in kind of zero-sum behaviors
are some of the worst things that we should not allow to perpetuate.
And so I'm curious as you think about replacing the accredited investor rules,
what would your framework be for liberalizing investment and yet keeping the best things we have today,
which is, I think, really high standards of propriety
and really strict rules for honesty and fair dealing.
Great question, yeah.
So I think fraud you'd want to prosecute
to the full extent of the law.
And one thing you can do is have requirements
and they're about disclosures, right,
and say, if you want to raise money for this thing,
you do have to provide the following information.
And if you materially miss state something,
especially intentionally, you know,
and you defraud investors,
you should go to jail for that, right?
Now, it doesn't mean only wealthy people should be allowed to do it, right?
So I think that's a nice way to divide up those issues.
Yeah, I think that there's also, you know, we don't want to create this false idea
that the government stamp of approval means it's a good investment, right?
Because there's many stocks that have been, you know, publicly traded companies,
very blessed by the SEC or whatever that went down 85, 90% in the last few years, right?
some of the biotechs or I won't name companies, but a lot of them, you can lose your shirt
in the public markets with these officially. So we need to kind of teach a sense of personal responsibility
in this too, which is there is no return without some amount of risk. And, you know, the government
is not here to tell you what is a good investment or not. You still have to make that judgment
yourself. But they can help by saying what the information this person is giving you is true.
And if they're lying to you, there are, there's tort law for that where they can go,
you can go have damages. I probably lean a little more free market on this than most people,
but yeah, I think, yeah, they're, you know, the best consumer protection sometimes is competition,
right? If you have a car company and it's like it's a bad car and it keeps breaking down and it's
expensive and in some ways the best solution is to have another company come in and try to compete
with them and provide a better alternative. And a lot of people who are, a lot of people are actually
very street smart, even if they're not like financially literate, but they know what a scam is,
you know, and they know that their three friends told them that that thing is not good.
Do you guys try to do anything on the Coinbase product side of things with kind of some of the
coin hype scams that happen, or do you say people are grownups and they should evaluate their
own investments?
Yeah, we've had a lot of debate about this because, you know, it's a little bit like the app
stores or maybe even Amazon where, let's say someone's trying to sell like a fraudulent product
on Amazon.
They probably want to get rid of that, right?
But let's say that it's like a two or a three-star product,
and some people, they like it, and a lot of people don't.
But it's not a fraud.
Like you actually, you know, you want to allow people to make their own choices
and see if you've got two stars, but you can buy this if you want, right?
And maybe the provider of it can clean it up, too, and you tell them.
So we've tried to take a similar philosophy where we want to list everything that is legal,
and, you know, frauds are not legal, would be illegal,
and provide information of the customer
and help to make better decisions.
We've tried variations of this.
We haven't quite nailed it yet,
I think about like an on-chain review system,
a reputation score.
We actually released like an API
that allows anybody to look up a crypto address,
which could be for an asset or a person
and have like kind of an on-chain reputation score,
so it's kind of an early prototype of this.
But I think eventually you'll get kind of like a FICO score equivalent.
You'll get like an Amazon or Yelp rating equivalent.
And you want to make sure, you know, if I'm trying to send a few U.S.D. coin to John Collison, you know, for the pint, I need to make sure it's the real John Collison, you know, not an imposter squatting on your name or something like that.
So those are some of the tools I think we can, in the private market, build that would help this.
And yeah, and let the government kind of go after the fraudsters.
Nice, sounds.
You mentioned crypto's product market fit in emerging markets, and there is a very strong product market fit there.
that's actually not new. People in markets where there's historically been a very high rate of inflation
have traditionally sought to get money out of that currency. People talk about buying hard assets
as one approach trying to get money in dollars. It's already a behavior to try and get money
out of that currency and into something that they think will hold its value better. This is not invented
by crypto. This existed for many decades. Maybe countries where there is a black market exchange rate,
that's like a good indicator for there will be this demand there.
The governments of many of these countries will not all of us approve of this,
where they would prefer that all money is kept in the country's currencies.
There's kind of a gap between what the government wants and what the people wants.
Where does this go? Who wins?
Well, you're right. We are often walking in this balance when we go into a new country
where we really want to work within the existing system,
and we often will go get a license, set up a local entity for our regulated financial service product.
And I'll come back to our self-custodial wall in a moment.
There are usually portions of the government which are hesitant around crypto.
Sometimes it's the central bank, right?
But there's other parts of the government that are actually very pro-it.
They want to digitize the country and create economic opportunity.
So we're sort of talking, you know, you can talk to different hands of the government.
You'll hear different things.
But the people, the people unequivocally want it.
So in many parts of the world, we're able to work within that system and offer what people want.
other parts of the world, it actually would be difficult to impossible for us to go and create a regulated financial service business.
Because that country doesn't have a clear regulatory framework.
They only give out bank licenses to their cousins and friends who bribe them, which would be illegal for a U.S. company to do.
And you just can't do business very well effectively in many of these places.
So we also have a self-custodial wallet that is not regulated as a financial service business because we never take possession of customer funds.
It's regulated more like a software product, like a messaging app.
can just launch it.
It's if you kept your keys in one password,
so ultimately the software product.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's allowing us to go into some of these other markets.
And I mean, you asked where this will go.
I mean, in some of these markets, I'd say like there's the top five or 10 fiat currencies,
government currencies, the majors, you know, those will probably stay around.
I don't think they're going anywhere.
But the US dollars with franc, everything with that.
Yeah.
But the long tail, the other 150 or so government currencies, I think they probably should get replaced.
I mean, they're not really.
they're not doing a good job. They're often abused. They're eroding the rights of the people. And
I think that there is a good case to be made that those should get replaced by Bitcoin and
USDC, etc. It was Ecuador or something like that that actually, you know, they pegged their currency
of the dollar too. So it's a way of doing that in all these countries, almost as an act of civil
disobedience, frankly, like in some of these places like Venezuela, you may be technically
breaking the law or something by introducing a self-crysodial wallet that brings dollars to the people.
I think I'd be okay with that. Like that's an act of civil, you know, because
people are really in terrible conditions there due to the government stealing their wealth via
inflation. So I think that is a good thing. And then I'd say even, and obviously digital dollars
is very unequivocally good for the United States and keeping the reserve currency status and
demand for treasuries. It's also a good thing for Bitcoin to be used in the United States because
the democracies around the world are having a problem right now with deficit spending. And like,
it's this kind of issue that to get elected, you can promise more free stuff and, you know,
that drives up the cost. How are we going to have the discipline to balance budgets?
And I think Bitcoin is part of the answer to that. It's a check and balance on deficit spending,
where if it gets too out of control, people will flee to Bitcoin in times of uncertainty.
If deficit spending is kept under control, people will continue to use that fiat currency.
And so I actually think, I don't want to be hyperbolic about this, but I actually think
Bitcoin is in some ways extending Western civilization, like or in the American experiment.
Because if the U.S. is going to lose the reserve currency status, which I hope it doesn't,
Because I'm an American, I believe in America is a good thing for the world.
But if we lose all discipline and we're going to lose the reserve currency status,
I'd rather people went to Bitcoin than to the Chinese Yuan.
And so, thank goodness we have Bitcoin as a check and balance in this new economy.
The deficit warriors look at the deficit maths and say, you know,
interest payments are now graded in defense spending.
How does the U.S. avoid losing reserve currency status?
Well, yeah, one of it is don't inflate away the dollar.
You know, the debt-to-GDP ratios, right, are the thing to watch, usually, right?
I think I forget what we're at now, 150 or 170 or something.
But I think if you look at historically, you know, maybe when it was in the British,
lost it or the Dutch, but they were in the 200, in the 250 range.
So we're within sight of, like, a pretty dangerous threshold historically.
It's hard to see where the political will is going to come from to do that.
And I hope that Bitcoin can be a part of that solution.
We'll see.
Why haven't non-dollar stablecoins worked?
You know, the share of global stable coins that is U.S. dollars is 95% plus.
I mean, it's much higher than the U.S. dollar's share of currency.
Why is that, and will it persist?
Well, I think that if you're going to have permissionless access to anything,
you're going to use the most trusted one, the reserve currency, right?
So that could be why.
You know, Europe actually, to their credit, they did put, I mean,
sometimes Europe's the leader on regulation, which is not necessarily what you want to lead on,
but they did get out a regulatory framework for the U.S. to their credit.
So there is a Eurocoin.
It's very small.
It's very small.
It doesn't have a lot of traction.
I don't know.
I think the dollar is solving the need that people have.
There's actually one other thing that's even smaller, which I think has interesting potential,
is called a flat coin.
I don't know if you've seen these, but they, instead of tracking like a one-to-one backed
by a dollar, which of course, you know, has some level of inflation between whatever,
two to five percent a year, a flat coin tries to track CPI, which is,
the consumer pricing index to maintain its purchasing power. So if like a Big Mac costs...
Like tips.
Yeah, inflation protected.
Security.
Yeah. So I think like if you could buy a Big Mac for a dollar or whatever today, a stable coin,
ideally 10 years from now, you'd also be able to buy it for a dollar. So there's,
there's one that's built by this company called Ample for. It's called Spot. And it's been
tracking a 2019 dollar since 2019. And it's now worth about a $1.26. It went through
crazy ups and downs. It's actually been pretty flat. And so economists will often debate,
Do you want to have 2003% inflation a year to incentivize people to spend their money?
But it's kind of nice to have one that also maintains its purchasing power for putting contracts together and pricing things that you want to be the same price in the future.
Yes, yes. What have you learned from Bology?
I was about to say, for anyone who Bologi is, but you can probably look at.
They probably know who Bollogy is. Bollogy.
He is one word.
It's like Madonna, exactly.
Yeah, one name. Bologi is a brilliant guy. I mean, he's probably, I don't know.
Top couple of the smartest people I've ever met my life. He's very out there. He's truly an
original thinker. He was briefly the chief technology officer of Coinbase. He came in through an
acquisition, did some amazing work. And he taught me how to manage a totally different type of
person, I would say. You know, biology, he is kind of unmanageable. He's what some people might call
a free radical within an organization where he really bounces around and he's just kind of
absorbing vast amounts of information, even things that aren't his responsibility, maybe
if he's not even supposed to be doing.
He was explicitly told not to do them.
Yeah, it was explicitly told not to do them, does it anyway.
And occasionally he would come back to me with these just incredible insights.
And I'll give you kind of one funny biology story.
But at one point, he came back to me and he said, like, these are all the salespeople
that are making more revenue than their salary.
And these are all the people that are not.
And the first of the thought I had was,
you're not supposed to have access to anybody's salary.
How did you get that?
He's like, don't worry about it.
I found it in some database, you know, somewhere I wasn't supposed to have access to.
The other thing I asked him was like, well, how did you connect all that up?
Because last week I was asking the data team, well, can you connect Salesforce to all of our salary data?
And let's start to run some reports and have some more accountability.
And he was like, oh, well, I couldn't sleep this weekend.
And I just knew something felt off.
And so I had to, like, code it up and put it all together.
And I was like, okay, give me a little bit of time to go verify this.
Because he came in on Monday.
He looked like he hadn't slept the whole weekend.
He's kind of this mad genius.
By the way, I went and ran it down with the actual data team,
and it took them three weeks to replicate what he had done over the weekend,
but it came back, and he's 100% right.
So he continually was doing things like that.
And he's incredibly, like, high disagreeableness,
which I learned from him as well, where he would go into a team and say,
why is this not functioning well?
And, you know, he would suffer no fools, right?
And he would not be afraid to go in there
and turn half the people on a team.
Whether he had the permission to fire them or not,
sometimes he would just torture them to greatness or whatever.
He is a very contrarian figure.
I'd say about once a week someone would come into my office as CEO
and say, I can't work with Bologi.
And, you know, and he's causing so much collateral damage.
And I'd say, yeah, but he's also generating an enormous amount of value.
and I need you to learn how to work with him.
And I realize it's difficult, but it's creating a very positive outcome across all these areas.
Now, I kind of knew that it wasn't going to last forever because it was incredibly disruptive.
But I learned from him how to come and be like a turnaround CEO when needed, if I can call it that.
Where I think in the past, I was opting a little more toward trying to be liked instead of to be clear about what we're doing and where we're going and what the bar is.
And so he helped me be a better CEO and have a little more disagreeableness.
He encouraged you to let Brian be Brian and listen to yourself more.
I like the tweet a while back of the three scariest words in English language or
apology was right.
I think it was about some COVID prediction or something like that.
Well, he was frequently very early on his predictions.
And I think that I think you...
Are there predictions he had that you thought were crazy at the time that now you have,
or worldviews he had that, yeah, you thought were crazy initially and now you've come
around. Yeah, I mean, you know, I think like he was actually early kind of warning me about
the activist contingent within the company and I was like, this isn't not a big deal. Like, you know,
people. This is the apolitical companies. Yeah, which led to the mission first post. And he was,
he was telling me about that years before. And I sort of like, this is, this can't be a big deal.
Okay, so on that, in 2020, you released this blog post saying that Coinbase is a mission-oriented
company and take all your other, you know, issues you might have and don't come to them with us
and work somewhere else if you don't like it. And you had a buyout.
offer if people didn't want to work at such a company and a few percent of the company took the
buyout. And this was like a big deal at the time and everyone was talking about it. I think part of
what's interesting is how much the industry has moved where Coinbase was, I don't want to say
a pariah, but definitely notable at the time for being so stringent on this point. And recently,
literally Google was putting out a blog post saying, leave your politics at home. We're just focused on
organizing the world's information.
I would only hear from you about all your other stuff.
And so it feels like Silicon Valley has really shifted on this.
But one question I had is you talk about being an apolitical company.
I feel like apolitical is a convenient way to frame it,
but it's maybe more something like there's actually a very narrow set of views
that you have to agree with to work at Coinbase.
You have to believe in financial freedom.
Or you know, you have to believe that crypto is a good thing for the world.
And then everything else we're just not going to engage with
and we'd rather you don't bring up.
Maybe that's a technicality.
Maybe that's kind of nuance.
Actually, as I was writing that blog post,
originally I was thinking of calling it an apolitical company,
but I changed it to be mission first,
because you're absolutely right.
We are unapologetically pro-crypto.
We're about economic freedom.
And you could argue, okay, that does have a policy angle to it, right?
In fact, we are trying to get massive change happening in D.C.
with legislation passed.
So we are very unapologetic about engaging in politics on our mission.
But everything outside of that,
which sometimes there's edge cases you have to go figure out.
But everything outside of that, we try not to bring it to work.
And so it's a mission-first policy as opposed to being explicitly apolitical across everything.
But, yeah, that was an evolution.
And we did take a lot of arrows for doing that, but I think it was a good move.
I presume you think it was now looking back on it.
You're very glad that you did it.
Very glad, yeah.
I mean, I was failing as a leader before that because I was not creating clarity in the organization.
We were having some people thought our mission included social justice,
activism on police brutality. Some people thought, you know, and I clarified it. And I said,
we're all going this way. Yes. And I'm sorry, I failed to create clarity beforehand. But
if you don't want to work here at that company more now that I'm making it clear, you know,
here's the exit package. And we had all these debates internally. People were terrified that I was
about to do this. You had some people try to convince me not to do it. And some people said 50% of
the company will quit and all this. And it turned out to be 5%. Yeah. So it was, sometimes your fear
gives you bad advice and you have to, I got more confidence to do it by basically going and talking
to some of our employee groups, hearing from them directly, and also, you know, watching some
videos of people like Lee Kuan Yew and Ronald Reagan, similar situations where, like, leadership
sort of inspiration moments. But yeah, I'm curious, where does Stripe land on this topic,
if you could talk about it?
Like I said, I think the norms have, or the expectations have very much shifted.
where, in a productive way, I think,
where people get that companies have a thing they're trying to do in the world,
and it's hard enough to do that thing.
Like, it's hard enough to get the Genus Act passed.
It's, you know, hard enough to make some impact in the world.
And that, you know, the U.S. is a pretty big place,
and there's, you know, a broad variety of views on a whole bunch of social views.
And so the classic, you know, if you're a classic, you know,
you're going to a dinner party in the 1950s, you know, the advice would have been that you leave
politics and religion, you know, aside as good, you know, work dinner party conversation topics.
And this rediscovering of old wisdom, I think that it's hard enough to do one thing.
And it's not that these aren't very worthwhile endeavours.
Like both of us have kind of pursuits that we're doing outside of work in various regards.
But just it's really hard to get an entire company,
aligned around some cause. And so you want to spend that capital very carefully. And I think yours
came up an interesting moment in time where there was a lot of expectations of companies to be
kind of broadly getting involved in a whole bunch of issues. And it was so notable again,
because that was such a popular idea at the time. But I think it's become almost received wisdom
at this point. And yeah, I think we never went super far into the broad set of issues. But I think I
I kind of broadly agree with you on companies, mostly sticking to the knitting.
Yeah.
It strikes me in that Coinbase, from a product point of view, when you're in the early days
of an industry, you kind of have to do everything.
Microsoft in the 90s, they were doing operating systems and they were doing applications,
and I mean, they made some hardware.
Remember, like the Microsoft Natural Keyboards and flight simulators, and exactly, in Carter, everything.
And if you look at Open AI and AI, they're doing consumer, they're doing B2B, they're doing SORA,
the video model there, again, because AI is so fast-changing and rapidly emerging.
And similarly in crypto, you guys have the institutional product, you have the stable coin
with USC, you have the brokerage, you have your L2 with base, and you're playing everywhere.
And again, that feels correct in a very fast-moving space.
It also seems like it would challenge focus, where everything is a good idea, because
it could work in this fast-moving industry.
And so how do you focus, how do you resource things, how do you decide what to cost?
Again, it's easy with Stripe because we're just trying to stick to the knitting.
We're trying to make the payment infrastructure good.
But your world is a more open-ended map.
Yeah.
Well, it all depends how you count.
I mean, you guys have a lot of products in the payment space.
I was simplifying the purpose of the question.
So a lot of this comes down to the founders, right?
So in my case, sometimes I can't help myself.
I have so many ideas.
And in fact, the company usually is pushing back a little bit.
We need more focus.
And I'm like, okay, you're right, we should focus.
Because there is virtue in focus.
There's also virtue in having multiple revenue streams.
Because when one thing's up, another wing's down, right?
There's virtue in having some small teams working on a variety of things
because USC and base started off as like three to five person teams.
And USC will probably add 800 million of revenue to our bottom line.
And, you know, I would have never guessed that in the past year.
So there's a lot of-
Would you actually not have guessed that?
Like, was it not obvious?
It was not.
I mean, actually, so we have this system internally where twice a year employees can
come pitch what like venture bets that they want to do internally.
And there's a, we've tried to construct it to be, you don't need a unanimous yes.
Like in most companies, you need your boss, your boss's boss, your budget, all the way
to the CEO to say yes to greenlight something, which means you get one no, you're out.
Yeah.
We try to create it a little bit more like internal venture capital.
So you can go to any of the product group leads.
And there's a handful of like smart, hand, hand,
picked engineers and then like myself and a few other people. And if you get any one of us to say yes
out of their budget to fund it, you're greenlit. So it's like pitching a bunch of internal venture
capitalists. So what that means is we get more of this risk-taking culture. We try a lot of ideas.
And some of them don't work and we have to shut them down. And that's actually hard.
How do you have the guts to cut? Because in a startup, you'd run out of money and you can't
raise the next round. So we have to kind of mimic these rounds of investment. But once in a while,
they completely defy odds. And I'll tell you, I'll tell you the secret, which is I actually voted no on
SDC project because I read it and I said, ah, it's just not really decentralized as much as I
would want. You know, I had some reason in my head. And thank goodness, somebody else in the team
voted yes to fund it out of their budget. And I was totally wrong. So I use that as an example
a lot where it's like the best ideas don't have to come from me. They have to come from everybody
in the company. And we have to try more ambitious ideas. How about base?
Base is another example that was a venture bet. It started as a small thing where Jesse came to
me and said he wanted to spin up a layer two. And I didn't have any specific idea about how to do it
or anything. The only thing that we did was we funded it and we shielded it because new ideas are
fragile sometimes within big companies. I think one time you told me a great phrase, you know,
you don't want to give it the big company bear hug of death. And so the only thing to my credit
was I may have protected it, but I didn't have any idea really what Jesse was working on for most
of that. And he iterated three or four ideas. And base was like the fourth thing that he came up with.
And it finally started to work and became the number one layer two solution on Ethereum.
And now it's the base app that just came out.
So I think as CEO, it's not so much my job to come up with the next great idea.
It's to create the right environment where good ideas can happen and be nurtured.
And the bad ideas eventually do get shut down.
We have some discipline around that.
And the hardest time to work on new venture bets is when, you know, the core is under threat or it's a downturn.
And the core is always under threat, right?
And so, you know, it's a...
That's why it's the core.
It's like a successful business that other people.
want. Right. Right. And so we have this great, this makes our decision making, I think,
it's very healthy decision making, but it's a healthy tension in the org where usually it's
like people are saying, the core is underfunded, it's under threat, how can we allocate more?
I want to take resources from that thing, it's not generating revenue yet. And not always,
but sometimes I'm on the other side saying, I want to fund the core. We also should have
some percent, 10 percent of our resources going to these venture bets. Because five, ten years
from now, we need to have the next chapter on coming out, right? And you see sometimes there's
founders versus operators. And I think if you have too much founder energy, they sometimes blow the
place up. Yeah. And if you have too much operator energy, they're just boring and they never do
anything innovative ever again, but they're very efficiently run or, you know, and so I think...
It's like a series of layer-dess curves, yeah. Yeah. I'm in a lucky spot at Coinbase with Emily Choi
is the president, and she and I make a great team where I, you know, I think we can both do it either way,
but the natural...
It's like a natural happy place.
Yeah.
I try to be a little more founder,
like provide the risk tolerance,
the venture bets.
She really makes it a well-run company,
pushes back when she's like,
you know, Brian,
if we just focused on the core in Europe,
it might generate another billion of revenue, right?
So it's a great, it's a great combo.
Do you use prediction markets anywhere internally
and how you run the business?
Not yet.
Shouldn't you, have your crypto-pilled?
Yeah.
We are integrating, working on prediction markets.
There's still, we haven't gotten
full clarity. This new CFTC chair hasn't been confirmed yet. The U.S. citizens are not
allowed to use it yet. The on-chain ones. The ones that are approved to work in the U.S.,
you have to get them, I believe each market has to be approved by the CFTC. So if you had some
fun internal pet project, we just hadn't, we don't have the resources to go get everything.
But hopefully it becomes lower friction at some point. But then once they are approved,
yeah, will I see a prediction market on projects or something like that? You can use them.
That's a great idea.
What are other ways in which Coinbase is crypto-pilled, AI-pilled, works differently from a company founded 10 or 20 years prior?
Yeah.
Well, like a lot of companies, I mean, we're leaning as hard as we can into AI.
I don't know how much...
What does that mean concretely?
So we're doing a lot of the best practices, right?
We made a big push to get every engineer on cursor and co-pilot.
And then another question was, well, are they actually going to use it?
Because a lot of them onboarded when I...
Well, you were Toby who mandated it.
I mandated it.
Yeah.
You required people to have a call with you.
Yeah, that's true.
I did do that.
You require people to justify to you, the CEO, if they weren't using AI.
That's true.
That's true.
Sorry, maybe I'm not meant to tell the story.
No, no, I don't mind.
It's actually a good story.
I mean, originally they were coming back and saying, all right, over the next quarter,
or can remember if it was two quarters, they're like, we're going to get to 50% adoption.
I was like, you're telling me, why can't every engineer just onboard by the end of the week?
And so I kind of went, I went rogue.
and I posted in the all-inch slash channel.
Just a light dusting of founder mud.
Yeah, I was like, AI's important,
we need you to all learn it at least onboard.
You don't have to use it every day yet
until we do some training,
but at least on board by the end of the week.
And if not, I'm hosting a meeting on Saturday
with everybody hasn't done it,
and I'd like to meet with you to understand why.
Now, a few people were on vacation,
there was a list of,
anyway, I jumped on this call on Saturday,
and there was a couple people that had not done it,
and some of them had a good reason,
because they were just getting back from some trip or something,
and some of them didn't, and they got fired.
At least, some people really didn't like it, by the way,
that heavy-handed approach,
but I think it did set some clarity, at least,
that we need to lean into this and learn about it.
And what's your experience of AI coding being so far?
It's clear that, you know,
it is very helpful to have AI helping your write code.
It's not clear how you run an AI-coded code base.
I don't know what the best way to do it is.
I agree.
I think we're still figuring that out, too.
I mean, one thing we started doing is every month we host, we call it an AI Speed Run,
where someone, one of the engineers volunteers that month to run a training for how they're using it.
And we try to cherry pick the people, the teams that are doing it the best.
And, you know, we're doing about, I think it's about 33% of code written by AI now.
We have a goal to get to 50% by the end of the quarter.
Let's see if we get there.
You probably can go too far with it.
You don't want people vibe coding these systems, moving money.
And so we've really encouraged people to really, you have to code review it and have the appropriate checks in place on that
with humans in the loop. But some of the front end pieces, etc., you can iterate faster.
We want to make sure it's used not just in the engineering teams, right? It really should be any
team like design is using it heavily. Product managers, I think FPNA could even be using this
as like generate, ingest all the data and tell me what you forecast the revenue to be, right?
So we're getting to a world where, even as CEO, by the way, I use it a lot. You know, we use like
a decision-making process called Rapids and everyone writes their input. We have a row
for AI that writes its input in as one of the people that help make decisions.
And so we're kind of testing the limits of it of like, you know, when can it actually start
to be the decision maker on some things and do better than humans?
Yeah.
Last question.
What advice do you have for us as we start to navigate the crypto world more and as
crypto becomes so much more relevant for payments?
Well, I feel like I should be asking you the same question.
You know, we're starting for...
In payments, you guys are in crypto.
Hopefully we get to do work more together.
crypto is never as good as it seems never as bad as it seems
you've got to be in it for the long haul through ups and downs
it's very sexual yeah and i would say that
crypto is about decentralized protocols fundamentally so i think those are the ones
that have done the best right and um there are temptations at times
i will name some of the prior projects but they'll they've come together with small
like consortiums of companies i think we really want to make more open standards and that's
There's a trade-off because if you truly have a decentralized protocol, it's slower, right?
And like base, for instance, we started it, but it's going through progressive decentralization.
And we went from stage zero to stage one decentralization.
We're getting a stage two soon.
And so everybody should really, on that network, be able to exist on a level playing guild with Coinbase.
That's where we're getting to.
And so I think in that ethos, everybody, it's a permissional system where we can build on.
that's what's going to actually disrupt traditional finance.
It's not going to be another proprietary system.
And there's a spectrum between those two things.
It's not like a binary.
I guess that's how to get really red-pillot on.
Embrace what makes crypto actually work.
Yep.
All right, well, with that, thank you.
Thank you.
