Crypto Exchanges Buckle as Stock Losses Mount Amid Exodus

Crypto’s latest downturn looks different on the surface. There are no spectacular scandals, no bankrupt exchange, no regulatory crackdown. Yet for the industry’s biggest trading platforms, the damage is starting to look uncomfortably familiar.

Bitcoin is down more than 35% since an October crash from record highs. But for exchanges like Coinbase Global Inc., Gemini Space Station Inc. and Bullish, the hit has been far steeper. Trading volumes — the core engine of their business — are plunging, dragging share prices down 40% to almost 60% over the past three months and forcing analysts to slash expectations. Coinbase, Gemini and Bullish didn’t return requests for comment.

The pressure point is simple. Most crypto exchanges generate the biggest chunk of their revenue from transaction fees. When trading activity dries up, earnings drop. At Coinbase, fourth-quarter trading volume may have dropped 40% from a year earlier to $264 billion, Clear Street analyst Owen Lau estimates. January activity trended even lower, putting the quarter’s run rate so far on pace to come in at less than half of last year’s level, he said.

For investors who use crypto stocks as proxies for digital-asset growth, the message is more than uncomfortable: Even modest price declines can translate into outsized revenue pain when traders step away altogether. This past weekend’s collapse of Bitcoin to below $80,000 appears to make the odds of broader investor exodus greater and even more agonizing.

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When prices are rising, more people trade because they’re afraid of missing out, said Peter Christiansen, director of digital assets equity research at Citigroup. But “if you get headwinds to that, it is hard to build momentum,” he said.