Coinbase’s 2026 Power Move: One Platform for Crypto, Stocks, and Commodities
Wall Street's walls are crumbling. Coinbase just announced plans for a unified exchange—crypto, stocks, and commodities all on one screen by 2026. It's the financial singularity retail traders have been waiting for.
The All-in-One Gambit
Forget juggling six different apps and brokerages. The vision is simple: a single login, a unified wallet, and one margin account to rule them all. Buy Bitcoin at 9 AM, short wheat futures at 10 AM, and scoop up a tech stock dip by lunch—no transfers, no waiting, just execution.
Why This Changes Everything
This isn't just convenience; it's a structural attack on legacy finance. By bundling asset classes, Coinbase bypasses the traditional silos that keep fees high and liquidity fragmented. It turns every crypto trader into a potential multi-asset portfolio manager overnight.
The Regulatory Gauntlet
Pulling this off means navigating a minefield of regulators—the SEC for stocks, the CFTC for commodities, and a patchwork of state rules for crypto. The 2026 timeline is as much a regulatory bet as a technical one, banking on clearer rules of the road.
A Cynical Take
Let's be real—the traditional brokerages will call this reckless, right before they launch their own copycat product in 2027. Innovation in finance often means doing what the incumbents have always done, just without the three-hour hold music and $50 wire fees.
The race is on. If Coinbase delivers, the line between 'crypto exchange' and 'everything exchange' vanishes for good. Your move, Wall Street.
Prediction Markets and Tokenized Stocks Take Center Stage
Coinbase moved aggressively into prediction markets in late 2025, partnering with Kalshi, a federally regulated platform approved by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Leaked screenshots in November revealed a Coinbase-branded prediction interface supporting USDC or USD trading across economics, politics, sports, and technology categories.
The product operates through Coinbase Financial Markets, the exchange’s derivatives arm, using Kalshi’s regulatory framework to offer event contracts structured as simple yes-or-no questions.
Beyond prediction markets, Coinbase plans to issue tokenized equities in-house rather than through external partners, marking a departure from rivals like Robinhood and Kraken that rely on third-party providers for stock tokens in select jurisdictions.
Leaked screenshots show @Coinbase developing a prediction markets platform built on @Kalshi’s regulated infrastructure.#Kalshi #Coinbasehttps://t.co/2aWPAEBQcV
Monthly transfer volumes for tokenized equities have climbed roughly 76% over the past 30 days to about $2.46 billion, according to rwa.xyz, as platforms experiment with bringing traditional assets onchain.
The push fits Coinbase’s ambition to become an “” for digital assets where customers can trade crypto, tokenized securities, and event-based markets under one roof.
Prediction markets have experienced explosive growth over the past year, attracting interest from both traditional exchanges and crypto-native firms that see them as a new way to monetize information and order flow.
Gemini recently secured CFTC approval to launch its prediction platform, Gemini Titan, for American customers.
At the same time, Crypto.com struck deals with partners, including TRUMP Media & Technology Group, to help build prediction markets.
Robinhood and trading firm Susquehanna also agreed to buy 90% of the regulated venue LedgerX, deepening their exposure to the crypto prediction market sector.
Regulatory Tailwinds and Institutional Momentum Build
Coinbase executives see favorable conditions ahead as regulatory clarity improves and institutional participation deepens.
David Duong, the exchange’s head of investment research, said in a year-end outlook that 2025 marked a turning point for digital assets, with regulated spot ETFs opening broader investor access and stablecoins becoming more embedded in traditional financial workflows.
“We expect these forces to compound in 2026 as ETF approval timelines compress, stablecoins take a larger role in delivery-vs-payment structures, and tokenized collateral is recognized more broadly across traditional transactions,” Duong wrote.
@Coinbase expects ETFs, stablecoins and tokenization to reinforce each other and drive faster crypto adoption in 2026.#Coinbase #Cryptohttps://t.co/TN8aoyEUEE
Armstrong emphasized the regulatory shift during a February earnings call, telling investors, “it’s hard to overstate the significance of the change that’s happened in the last few months.”
He argued that the transformation in US attitudes toward crypto is prompting global markets to follow, while Coinbase benefits from a playbook for international expansion.
According to its Q3 shareholder letter, the exchange managed $516 billion in assets, equivalent to 16% of total crypto market capitalization.

Armstrong projected that up to 10% of global GDP could run on crypto rails by decade’s end, comparing the shift to how companies adapted to the internet in the early 2000s.
“It’s a little bit like the early 2000s when every company had to figure out how to adapt to the Internet,” he said during the call.
Regarding stablecoins, Coinbase’s chief policy officer, Faryar Shirzad, recently warned that restrictions on stablecoin rewards could weaken the United States’ position in digital payments, as China allows commercial banks to pay interest on digital yuan wallets starting January 1, 2026.
The People’s Bank of China unveiled the framework to shift its central bank digital currency beyond a cash substitute, triggering Chinese investors to pour more than $188 million into digital yuan-related stocks following the announcement.