coinbase seeks trading approval

After years of legal drama that would make reality TV blush, Coinbase is back at the SEC‘s doorstep asking for permission to sell tokenized stocks on the blockchain. The crypto exchange needs either a no-action letter or exemptive relief from regulators to make this happen. You know, the same SEC that sued them for allegedly operating as an unregistered broker-dealer before dropping the case in February 2025.

The whole thing is pretty wild. Coinbase wants to turn regular stocks into blockchain tokens. Think instant settlements, 24/7 trading, and lower costs because blockchain handles the boring paperwork. Traditional market hours? That’s cute. The stock market closing at 4 PM while crypto never sleeps has always been a weird flex anyway.

Traditional market hours are cute when crypto never sleeps and blockchain handles the boring paperwork

Here’s where it gets spicy. If approved, Coinbase would go head-to-head with Robinhood, Charles Schwab, and crypto competitors like Kraken, who’s cooking up similar plans. Everyone wants a piece of this tokenized pie. The SEC, apparently tired of playing the villain, is now having “open dialogue” with crypto firms. What a time to be alive.

Coinbase isn’t just winging it though. They’re developing something called a “Blockchain Token Securities Law Framework” because nothing says innovation like regulatory compliance. They’re also cozying up to the SEC’s crypto task force and working on international expansion. Luxembourg is their EU base, and they’re close to snagging a MiCA license for cross-border services. Meanwhile, their stock has taken a hit, trading at $250.02 after dropping over 4.55% in recent trading.

The stakes? Massive. This could kickstart a new era of blockchain-managed securities in the U.S. Small businesses and retail investors worldwide could get access through Coinbase’s platform, complete with stablecoin payment integrations. This innovation could particularly attract younger demographics interested in merging their crypto and stock portfolios.

Of course, regulatory uncertainty still looms like a bad hangover. The definitions remain murky, and Coinbase needs that broker-dealer registration or exemption to make this work.

But let’s be real. After surviving the SEC’s enforcement gauntlet, Coinbase seems ready to push blockchain into mainstream finance. Whether the SEC plays ball this time is anyone’s guess. The crypto exchange is betting big that tokenized stocks are the future. Traditional brokerages better start paying attention.

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