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Fortune
Fortune
Ben Weiss

Coinbase shares are up 35% since the SEC sued the crypto exchange for allegedly selling unregistered securities

Brian Armstrong, founder and CEO of Coinbase, speaks on stage at a conference in 2019. (Credit: Steven Ferdman—Getty Images)

Coinbase shares tumbled approximately 20% in early June following the Securities and Exchange Commission’s blockbuster lawsuits against Binance and then Coinbase.

But Coinbase stock has bounced back, rising some 35% after dropping to a low of about $51 on the day that the SEC sued the U.S.’s largest crypto exchange. As of Wednesday morning, shares were trading near $70, and the publicly traded company’s market capitalization has risen to about $16.4 billion.

The resurgence of Coinbase mirrors the broader boomerang of the crypto market in June, riding a Wall Street–fueled fever for Bitcoin that has lifted other cryptocurrencies and injected optimism into an industry that was reeling from a battery of enforcement from the federal government.

“The Coinbase stock has been rallying, the price of Bitcoin has been rallying, and then these two things usually play off of each other,” Omid Malekan, an adjunct professor at Columbia Business School who specializes in the crypto market, told Fortune.

Specifically, Bitcoin’s resurgence is tied to BlackRock’s recent filing of an application for Bitcoin spot exchange-traded fund, a surprising vote of confidence from the U.S.’s largest asset manager in the world’s largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization.

Shortly after BlackRock’s application became public, the price of Bitcoin soared, notching its highest price in more than a year as a slew of other asset managers filed applications for Bitcoin spot ETFs, potentially opening up the cryptocurrency to trillions in dollars from brokerage accounts and pension funds.

And where Bitcoin goes, so goes the broader market, as the total market capitalization of all cryptocurrencies jumped from just about $1 trillion to now about $1.17 trillion.

Moreover, Malekan pointed out that BlackRock’s ETF filing was not only a vote of confidence in Bitcoin but also Coinbase. Its application listed the publicly traded crypto exchange as the custodian for holding the trust’s underlying Bitcoin.

“For them to continue and list Coinbase as a custodian for their ETF was a strong signal that these SEC allegations are not that big of a deal,” he told Fortune.

Malekan added: “I think the market is telling us…the worst is behind us, as far as U.S. regulatory crackdown is concerned.”

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