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Coinbase Adds Stock Portfolio Transfers as It Expands Beyond Crypto



Coinbase is making it easier for US customers to fold traditional markets into the same account they use for crypto. On Tuesday, the company said it now lets users transfer existing stock and ETF portfolios from other brokerages into Coinbase Advanced, its platform aimed at active traders.



The move extends Coinbase’s earlier stock and exchange-traded fund (ETF) push, which began earlier this year with access to about 6,000 securities. Coinbase says the new capability enables a direct portfolio transfer rather than requiring users to sell holdings elsewhere and recreate positions on the Coinbase platform.



Key takeaways



  • Coinbase Advanced now supports portfolio transfers of stocks and ETFs via ACATS, allowing holdings to move without selling.

  • The rollout builds on Coinbase’s earlier stock and ETF trading launch, expanding beyond an initial selection of roughly 6,000 securities.

  • Coinbase continues to package market tools for active users, including TradingView charting and fractional share availability.

  • The company’s broader trading expansion includes options, thematic equity index perpetual futures, pre-IPO perpetuals, and expanded prediction markets, with some items outside the US.

  • Coinbase’s non-crypto expansion comes as its earnings have continued to track crypto market conditions, highlighting the need for more diverse revenue streams.



Portfolio transfers: the practical upgrade for US users


Coinbase’s announcement is notable not only because it adds more tradable assets, but because it targets an operational friction point for users: the hassle of moving money and rebuilding portfolios. According to a Coinbase spokesperson, transfers into Coinbase can be executed through the Automated Customer Account Transfer Service (ACATS), which supports the movement of securities and cash between brokerages without requiring the positions to be sold.



For users, this matters because it lowers the barrier to consolidation. Instead of opening a new brokerage account, selling and re-buying shares, and potentially triggering taxable events or disrupting long-term holdings, customers can shift existing portfolios into Coinbase Advanced in a more streamlined way.



Coinbase is also positioning the service with active-trader features. The company said the platform offers zero-commission trading, TradingView charting tools, fractional shares, and rewards of up to 3.5% on eligible USDC balances.



Beyond crypto: Coinbase’s effort to become a multi-asset platform


Coinbase’s latest stock and ETF capabilities reinforce a strategy that has been steadily expanding: turning the exchange from a primarily crypto-focused venue into a broader financial platform. In Tuesday’s update, Coinbase said the services are designed to compete more directly with mainstream brokerages and fintech apps by letting users manage stocks, ETFs, and cryptocurrencies from a single account.



That “single account” approach is increasingly important as users look for convenience and integrated workflows—especially those who already trade multiple asset classes. By aligning stock trading mechanics with crypto access, Coinbase is effectively trying to remove the need for parallel accounts and separate user experiences.



Still, the scope of Coinbase’s offering is not confined to cash equities. The company also outlined additional trading expansions, indicating it intends to broaden its derivatives lineup and expand where tokenized securities are available.



What else Coinbase is expanding: options, perpetuals, and prediction markets


Alongside the stock and ETF transfer feature, Coinbase detailed further upgrades to its trading offerings. The company said it is working on crypto and stock options, thematic equity index perpetual futures, pre-IPO perpetuals, and expanded prediction markets.



Coinbase also stated that tokenized stocks will be available to customers outside the United States starting next month. Some features are available immediately, while others are expected to roll out over the coming months, though Coinbase did not provide specific timelines for each item.



This sequencing suggests Coinbase is prioritizing assets and infrastructure that can be introduced quickly while continuing to build out longer-horizon products such as specialized perpetual structures and tokenized equity access beyond the US market.



Why it matters now: Coinbase’s earnings still follow crypto cycles


Coinbase is pushing deeper into stocks and ETFs at a time when investors are focused on how resilient the company’s business is beyond digital asset volatility. Coinbase’s financial results have frequently mirrored crypto price movements, and the company’s expansion appears designed to reduce dependence on trading activity tied strictly to cryptocurrency cycles.



Earlier coverage from CNBC reported that Coinbase delivered stronger-than-expected fourth-quarter 2024 earnings, with a post-election rally contributing to a 130% jump in revenue. More recently, Coinbase posted a surprise loss in the first quarter of 2026 after weaker cryptocurrency prices weighed on trading activity, according to reporting by MSN. In that period, Coinbase reported a loss of $1.49 per share on $1.41 billion in revenue, missing analysts’ expectations of 27 cents per share on $1.52 billion in revenue.



Spot crypto trading remains Coinbase’s primary source of revenue, but expanding into stocks, ETFs, and additional derivatives could help diversify income streams. Even if crypto remains dominant, broadening the product set can matter in two ways: it can attract users who want multi-asset exposure and it can potentially stabilize demand when one market segment cools.



At the same time, investors should be attentive to how quickly Coinbase’s stock and ETF business gains traction relative to crypto. The company’s roadmap includes ambitious products beyond spot markets, but the practical impact will likely depend on adoption, liquidity, and the rate at which new offerings roll out.



For now, the portfolio transfer feature is a tangible step: it lowers switching costs for stockholders who also trade crypto. The next question is how Coinbase’s broader multi-asset trading suite—especially options, perpetuals, and tokenized stocks outside the US—will scale over the coming months, and whether that scaling visibly offsets the ups and downs driven by crypto price swings.



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