Coinbase Targeting Stablecoin Growth, Onchain Adoption in 2026: Brian Armstrong

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TL;DR

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong aims to make Coinbase the top financial app globally by 2026, focusing on scaling stablecoins, payments, and onchain adoption through Base. The goals align with industry trends like regulatory clarity and tokenization, though some experts caution they may be overly ambitious in the near term.

Key Takeaways

  • Coinbase's 2026 priorities include expanding its exchange globally, scaling stablecoins and payments, and increasing onchain adoption via Base chain.
  • The company plans major investments in automation and product quality, leveraging Base to 'bring the world onchain'.
  • Industry experts like Anndy Lian view Coinbase's goals as directionally sound but potentially hyperbolic, emphasizing the need for user-centric utility and interoperability.
  • Regulatory clarity, institutional adoption, and factors like spot crypto ETFs and tokenization are expected to drive crypto growth in 2026.
  • Coinbase's strong Q3 2025 results, with a 26% revenue increase, support its strategic push, but success depends on enabling real-world use cases.

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Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong. Image: Coinbase/Decrypt

Crypto exchange Coinbase is aiming to scale up its stablecoin offerings and increase onchain adoption worldwide in 2026, according to CEO and founder Brian Armstrong.

In New Year’s Day tweet, Armstrong declared that the company’s overarching aim is to make Coinbase “the #1 financial app in the world.”

Here are our top priorities for 2026 at Coinbase:

1) Grow the everything exchange globally (crypto, equities, prediction markets, commodities - across spot, futures, and options)

2) Scale stablecoins and payments

3) Bring the world onchain through @CoinbaseDev, @base chain,…

— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) January 1, 2026

The post unpacked how Coinbase aims to move closer to this goal in 2026, with the company focusing on scaling stablecoins and payments, while also expanding its presence globally in crypto, equities, prediction markets and commodities.

Armstrong also affirmed that the exchange will be making “major investments” in automation and product quality, and that it will harness its Ethereum layer-2 network Base and Base App to “bring the world onchain.”

The post follows a similar New Year’s Eve update from David Duong, Coinbase’s Global Head of Investment Research, who argued that regulatory clarity and institutional adoption “are converging to make crypto part of the financial core.”

Duong also highlighted the role of spot crypto ETFs, stablecoins and tokenization in driving growth and adoption, suggesting that these factors will combine in 2026 “as ETF approval timelines compress, stablecoins take a larger role in delivery-vs-payment (DvP) structures, and tokenized collateral is recognized more broadly across traditional transactions.”

These remarks also come a couple of months after Coinbase posted better-than-expected Q3 financial results, which reported a 26% quarter-on-quarter increase in revenue, at $1.9 billion.

September also brought news that the exchange is considering launching a native token for Base, although it clarified that there is no definite timeline for any such potential launch.

How achievable are Coinbase’s goals?

While Coinbase did have a positive 2025, some industry commentators suggest that Brian Armstrong’s latest tweet may have been intentionally hyperbolic, and should be taken perhaps more as a long-term strategy than as goals for this year.

“Coinbase’s aims are directionally sound but overstate near-term feasibility; true adoption hinges on solving real problems, not just moving users onchain for its own sake,” said Anndy Lian, an intergovernmental blockchain advisor and currently the Chief Digital Advisor at the Mongolia Productivity Organization.

Speaking to Decrypt, Lian agreed that Coinbase is a “critical onramp” for retail and institutions, but that its stated aim of ‘bringing the world onchain’ oversimplifies the drawn-out process of adoption.



Coinbase's strengths lie in infrastructure such as custody and fiat rails, rather than "building these vertical applications," he said, adding that the exchange's aims "are realistic only if they enable others’ use cases—not lead them."

Having said that, Lian’s prediction for the wider cryptocurrency industry is that there will be a reemphasis on “user-centric utility” in 2026.

“After the speculative excesses of previous cycles, 2026 will prioritize relatable, non-speculative applications," he explained, pointing to examples such as travel platforms using crypto for seamless cross-border rewards, supply chain tracking for ethical sourcing, and healthcare data interoperability via permissioned chains.

Lian also suggested that 2026 will see enterprise adoption mature in finance (e.g. tokenized assets), healthcare (e.g. secure patient records) and supply chains (e.g. provenance verification), but that, ultimately,  success depends on interoperability and regulation.

Coinbase has been contacted for comment.

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