Coinbase’s Q1 2025 net income collapsed to roughly $66 million—a 94% decline from the prior year. Yet revenue climbed 24% year-over-year to $2.03 billion. The culprit: $597 million in paper losses on crypto assets held for investment. So price slides, thinning trading volumes, and ballooning costs combined to crush margins despite the top-line growth. So price slides.
“That diversification will help tamp down some of the volatility we’ve seen from pure crypto-only trading.”
— Isobel Gunn, Senior Analyst at CoinDesk Research
“We’re trying to diversify the things that people can trade so that as markets shift. Different behaviors shift, we’ll always have something that people want to trade.”
— Alesia Haas, CFO at Coinbase
BTC fell roughly 10–12% in Q1 2025, its weakest opening quarter in years. That volume collapse directly reduced transaction revenue to $1.26 billion of the $2.03 billion total. Ethereum’s steeper 45% plunge hit staking and services revenue harder than BTC-focused income streams.
Ethereum’s steeper 45% plunge.
Consumer trading dropped 17% quarter-over-quarter to $78.1 billion. Institutional trading slipped 9% to $315 billion. Total trading volume fell to $393.1 billion, down 26% year over year. So the business is acutely sensitive to market conditions.
Gas fees averaged 6.9 Gwei in Q1 2025, down from 17.2 Gwei in Q4 2024. Low fees suppress the economic incentive for network participation and blockchain-rewards components of subscription revenue.
Price Action: Crypto Market Slides and Their Reflection in Coinbase Q1
Bitcoin dropped approximately 11.7% in Q1 2025, its worst start to a calendar year since 2015. Ethereum plunged about 45% over the same period, as USDC asset price losses and broader crypto weakness dragged ETH down from around $3,300 to nearly $1,800 per unit. Those price slides hit Coinbase’s most revenue-sensitive business lines hard—lower crypto prices reduce both retail and institutional trading activity, directly cutting transaction revenue. Those price slides hit.
Institutional clients usually have higher fees per transaction, so the volume decline disproportionately hurts institutional revenue. Consumer trading dropped 17% quarter-over-quarter to $78.1 billion. Institutional trading slipped 9% to $315 billion. Total trading volume fell to $393.1 billion, down 26% year over year. So the business is acutely sensitive to market conditions.
Coinbase’s subscription and services revenue hit $698.1 million in Q1, up 9% quarter-over-quarter. Stablecoin revenue alone grew to $298 million in Q1, up 32% from Q4. That growth helped cushion losses, though not enough to offset the transaction revenue decline. That growth helped cushion losses.
What’s Driving Coinbase in 2025
Annual institutional trading volume dropped 9% quarter-over-quarter to $315 billion. And since institutional clients usually have higher fees per transaction, volume decline disproportionately hurts institutional revenue.
Regulatory pressure and macroeconomic uncertainty played out steeply through Q1: tariff policy concerns under President Donald Trump and U.S. economic slowdown fears were cited by Coinbase in its shareholder letter. Crypto price declines followed broader market risk aversion. Those $597 million in paper losses came from exposed investments on Coinbase’s balance sheet when ETH and BTC retreated.
Coinbase pushed non-transactional revenue hard. Subscription and services revenue hit $698.1 million in Q1, up 9% quarter-over-quarter and driven by stablecoin interest income and growth in Coinbase One. Stablecoin revenue alone grew to $298 million in Q1, up 32% from Q4. That growth helped cushion losses, though not enough to offset transaction revenue decline.
Coinbase Price Forecast: The $X–$Y Range
Analysts’ forecast ranges for Coinbase (COIN) stock span from a low-case around $150–$200 per share to an upside case near $300. The spread stems from differing views on transaction volume rebound potential, crypto asset loss depth, and how fast subscription and derivatives business can scale. The spread stems from.
The bull thesis assumes Bitcoin returns above $90,000 by mid-2025, ETH stabilizes above $2,500, reducing fair value losses on holdings. Strong institutional demand returns. Also, stablecoins and derivatives revenue could grow at annual rates of 40–60%, per Barclays and JPMorgan forecasts. Under that scenario, COIN stock might hold near $280–$320, trading multiples re-expanding as margins improve.
The bear thesis posits continued downward pressure on BTC and ETH, with prices slipping below $70,000 and $2,000 respectively. Also, macroeconomic policy tightening and severe regulatory constraints on staking services. In that scenario, net income would stay low, losses on crypto investments could deepen, and COIN stock might fall toward $130–$170. Extended price depression erodes investor confidence in the recovery narrative. Extended price depression erodes.
Bottom Line: Coinbase Outlook for 2025
The base case for Coinbase in 2025 is a revenue range of $8.5 billion to $9.5 billion with adjusted net income of about $400 million if crypto prices recover narrowly. An upside catalyst is a resurgence in BTC volatility paired with ETH governance and infrastructure wins that boost staking and services income. A downside risk keeps sustained crypto price decline that triggers repeated paper losses and a squeeze on transaction revenue. Near-term price action remains the key variable. Near-term price action remains.
Analysts
Adjusted net income, excluding crypto-investment fair value losses, was $527 million in Q1 2025. That metric shows underlying operational strength despite a headline GAAP net income of only $66 million. Operating expenses totaled $1.33 billion, up about 7% quarter-over-quarter, driven by higher marketing spend and USDC rewards as user balances hit new highs. That expense pressure limits margin expansion. Margin recovery depends on cost control and revenue mix shift.
According to Gus Gala, original analyst at Monness, Crespi, Hardt: “The stock has run ahead of underlying trading activity and lacks near-term catalysts to support its current valuation.”
According to Monness, Crespi, Hardt: “Real adoption metrics, especially on Base, would give us greater confidence.”