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Beneath the Surface

Coinbase Wants to Dominate the Internet Capital Markets

Loading ...Ian King

November 19, 2025 • 6 minute, 30 second read


ICO

Coinbase Wants to Dominate the Internet Capital Markets

“The emergence of open Internet protocols for value exchange, today led by the global adoption of Bitcoin’s blockchain, paves the way for value to move as freely as information and data move on the Internet today.”

– Jeremy Allaire, CEO, Circle

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Tokenization of traditional assets continues to drive value creation in the crypto space.

November 19, 2025 — In 2017, crypto startups raised more than $20 billion through a frenzy of Initial Coin Offerings.

It was the age of the ICO boom.

I remember just how wild it was, similar to the end of the dotcom boom. Investors were buying digital tokens tied to ideas that barely existed, while startups with nothing but a whitepaper were raising millions overnight.

Yet, for a brief period, it seemed like the internet had found a way to replace Wall Street.

Then the bubble burst.

By 2018, nearly half of all ICOs had failed.

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Image: tokendata.io

Billions in investor capital had evaporated, and regulators all over the world started cracking down hard on crypto.
That could’ve been the end of the experiment. But last week, Coinbase decided to resurrect it…

And maybe fix what went wrong.

The ICO Is Back

On November 10, Coinbase announced a new platform that lets users buy crypto tokens before they list on the exchange.

The company calls it: “a more sustainable and transparent way for projects to distribute tokens.”

In other words, we’re moving into ICO 2.0. But this time there will be more rules.

Of course, platforms like Pump.fun have already been operating in this territory for a while, but in a less formal and more risky way. Built on Solana, Pump.fun lets anyone spin up a new token in minutes and start trading it almost immediately.

And the results have been staggering. As of mid-2025, the platform had spawned more than 11.9 million tokens and generated over $780 million in revenue.

But most of these tokens never made it past the first day.

That’s because Pump.fun is built for speed, not staying power. Anyone can launch a token, with little vetting or accountability.

And most do it for the hype. The tokens generated on Pump.fun are often memecoins, although the platform has recently pivoted towards launching more utility tokens.

Coinbase is approaching its ICO platform differently. If Pump.fun is the casino of the crypto world, Coinbase wants to be the stock exchange.

According to the company, It plans to host one public token sale per month as the program scales.

First up is Monad Labs, a new Layer 1 blockchain aiming to rival Solana’s transaction speeds. Monad will sell 7.5 billion MON tokens (7.5% of its supply) at $0.025 each, raising about $187 million if fully subscribed. The sale will open on November 17 and run until November 22.

Buyers can invest as little as $100 or as much as $100,000, but they must use USD Coin (USDC). That’s the stablecoin backed one-to-one by U.S. dollars we’ve been talking about a lot recently.

When the sale closes, Coinbase will use an algorithmic allocation model that favors smaller investors. The company calls it “fill from the bottom.”

And to me, that’s what makes this new platform so exciting. It gives everyday investors a fair shot at getting in early, without being crowded out by bigger players.

Each project must also submit tokenomics disclosures and accept a six-month lockup before team members can sell their own tokens.

This new platform represents a major shift for the company. But why is it happening now?

Because the crypto industry is starving for new funding models.

Global token fundraising peaked at nearly $20 billion in 2018, then collapsed to under $1 billion by 2020. And it has never fully recovered.

Venture capital has filled the gap — in 2024, VC firms invested about $11.5 billion into crypto and blockchain startups — but much of that money still flows to a handful of elite projects.

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Meanwhile, retail investors have been shut out.

But Coinbase is betting that a structured, transparent platform can change that.

It’s also a smart way for the company to evolve its business. Trading volumes on Coinbase are down roughly 40% since 2021, and trading fees across the industry keep shrinking as rivals like Binance and Kraken slash costs to compete.

So Coinbase is moving into the same lucrative territory that investment banks occupy in traditional markets…

Origination.

By hosting token sales, Coinbase becomes both the underwriter and the exchange, taking fees from issuers while locking users deeper into its ecosystem.

It’s the digital equivalent of Nasdaq and Goldman Sachs rolled into one. And it’s a move that fits perfectly into Coinbase’s broader strategy.

Earlier this year, the company introduced x402, an internet payment protocol that lets one piece of software pay another using USDC.

Now it’s adding another layer with the ability for software to raise capital directly from users.

This is what I mean when I talk about creating a true internet capital market — a global system where anyone can fund innovation without banks or borders.

In practical terms, it means a developer in Kenya could instantly raise money — transparently, and in dollars — from a user in Kansas.

That’s the world Satoshi Nakamoto imagined when he launched Bitcoin.

And Coinbase is trying to make it real, one token sale at a time.

Coinbase seems to be launching its new platform cautiously.

I believe that’s the right approach. Because the SEC still believes that most token sales qualify as securities.

Even with the guardrails Coinbase has put in place, it could still face regulatory scrutiny. The company says it has “consulted extensively” with regulators, but it’s unclear if this new platform has formal approval.

And market risk is another factor here. ICOs are often volatile. If the first few sales flop or if these projects don’t deliver, it could kill enthusiasm for this new platform.

Still, it could be the most important experiment in crypto finance since the launch of Ethereum.

If Coinbase’s model succeeds, it could open a regulated path for public participation in early-stage projects. That would mean faster funding for developers and broader ownership for users.

It would represent a genuine bridge between traditional markets and decentralized finance.

In other words, the internet could finally have its own IPO system. And everyone will be able to take part in funding the future.

Ian King
Banyan Hill & Grey Swan Investment Fraternity

P.S. from Addison: We look forward to hearing more from Ian on tomorrow’s Grey Swan Live!

ICOs are just one trend we’re watching carefully as part of why we’re bullish on the crypto market now – especially with the latest price pullback.

However, we suspect the real action will come from what we call the Dollar 2.0 – a digitized, tokenized version of the U.S. dollar that could ensure U.S. global monetary dominance for decades to come.

This week on Grey Swan Live!, we’ve got another two-fer on the schedule for you:

On Thursday, November 20, 2025 at 2pm EST/11am PST we’ll take deep dive into our Dollar 2.0 thesis, with guests Ian King and Mark Jeftovic. The investment thesis remains well intact going into 2026, despite the recent, nasty selloff in the crypto market.

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Then on Friday, November 12, 2025 at 2pm EST/11am PSTwe’ve invited our friends at Prime Financial Services back to help you with tax planning for your investment portfolio ahead of the holiday season and closing out the trading year 2025.

Prime’s Nick Buhelos will join us again make sure you maximize your investment returns – by walking you through the correct financial structure you need to take advantage of explicit IRS business rules that apply to individual investors.

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If you have requests for new guests you’d like to see join us for Grey Swan Live!,  or have any questions for our guests, send them here.


The Money Printer Is Coming Back—And Trump Is Taking Over the Fed

December 9, 2025 • Lau Vegys

Trump and Powell are no buddies. They’ve been fighting over rate cuts all year—Trump demanding more, Powell holding back. Even after cutting twice, Trump called him “grossly incompetent” and said he’d “love to fire” him. The tension has been building for months.

And Trump now seems ready to install someone who shares his appetite for lower rates and easier money.

Trump has been dropping hints for weeks—saying on November 18, “I think I already know my choice,” and then doubling down last Sunday aboard Air Force One with, “I know who I am going to pick… we’ll be announcing it.”

He was referring to one Kevin Hassett, who—according to a recent Bloomberg report—has emerged as the overwhelming favorite to become the next Fed chair.

The Money Printer Is Coming Back—And Trump Is Taking Over the Fed
Waiting for Jerome

December 9, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

Here we sit — investors, analysts, retirees, accountants, even a few masochistic economists — gathered beneath the leafless monetary tree, rehearsing our lines as we wait for Jerome Powell to step onstage and tell us what the future means.

Spoiler: he can’t. But that does not stop us from waiting.

Tomorrow, he is expected to deliver the December rate cut. Polymarket odds sit at 96% for a dainty 25-point cut.

Trump, Navarro and Lutnick pine for 50 points.

And somewhere in the wings smiles Kevin Hassett — at 74% odds this morning,  the presumed Powell successor — watching the last few snowflakes fall before his cue arrives.

Waiting for Jerome
Deep Value Going Global in 2026

December 9, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

With U.S. stocks trading at about 24 times forward earnings, plans for capital growth have to go off without a hitch. Given the billions of dollars in commitments by AI companies, financing to the hilt on debt, the most realistic outcome is a hitch.

On a valuation basis, global markets will likely show better returns than U.S. stocks in 2026.

America leads the world in innovation. A U.S. tech stock will naturally fetch a higher price than, say, a German brewery. But value matters, too.

Deep Value Going Global in 2026
Pablo Hill: An Unmistakable Pattern in Copper

December 8, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

As copper flowed into the United States, LME inventories thinned and backwardation steepened. Higher U.S. pricing, tariff protection, and lower political risk made American warehouses the most attractive destination for metal. Each new shipment strengthened the spread.

The arbitrage, once triggered, became self-reinforcing. Traders were not participating in theory; they were responding to the physical incentives in front of them.

The United States had quietly become the marginal buyer of the world’s most important industrial metal. China, long the gravitational center of global copper demand, found itself on the outside.

Pablo Hill: An Unmistakable Pattern in Copper