Coinbase status: access issues and outage reports
Some problems detected
Users are reporting problems related to: transactions, website and mobile app.
Coinbase is a digital asset broker headquartered in San Francisco, California. They broker exchanges of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and other digital assets with fiat currencies in 32 countries, and bitcoin transactions and storage in 190 countries worldwide.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Coinbase reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
July 1: Problems at Coinbase
Coinbase is having issues since 03:40 AM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Coinbase users through our website.
- Transactions (25%)
- Website (25%)
- Mobile App (25%)
- Login (25%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Coinbase outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Transactions | 17 days ago |
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Website | 21 days ago |
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Login | 1 month ago |
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Mobile App | 2 months ago |
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Mobile App | 3 months ago |
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3 months ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.
Coinbase Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Sri ♦️♦️♦️ (@SreeAtX) reported@FBIDirectorKash Crypto scams destroyed billions. #WLUNA is a prime example — wrapped token promised 1:1 with LUNA, Coinbase halted everything during the crash, leaving victims locked out. Do Kwon got 15yrs, but holders still need restitution & a fix. Time to deliver. 🇺🇸 #WLUNA $wluna
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Sam Price (@CryptoLifer33) reportedEurope just gave crypto a survival test. MiCA is no longer just regulation — it’s become a market-share filter. Only ~12% of crypto firms operating in the EU are reportedly licensed to continue. When nearly 1,700 firms exit or wind down, liquidity doesn’t disappear equally. It migrates to the survivors. Institutions move to regulated custodians. Users move to licensed exchanges. The next winners won’t be the loudest platforms. They’ll be the compliant ones still standing. Watch Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, Bitpanda. Regulatory survival is becoming institutional alpha.
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jacopo.eth (@jacopo_eth) reported@ryanberckmans native integration for crypto transactions a la google/apple pay are a major blocker to mainstream adoption. I’ve long thought ethereum and the entire industry should align around a standard that the main mobile OSs and devices can adopt. this is very relevant to what we’re working on at slice. our QR checkout is basically what you described, but it gets much more powerful once it’s native. we worked on something related with coinbase last year, and will pick it back up eventually. it's definitely something we need to figure out for ethereum payments to succeed.
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Budhil Vyas (@BudhilVyas) reportedCircle ( $CRCL ) stock just had its worst day since its IPO. Down 17% in a day Here is exactly what happened: 1. A new entity called Open Standard launched a stablecoin, Open USD (OUSD) 2. 140+ companies backed it on day one — Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, BlackRock, Coinbase, Google, PayPal 3. Circle and Tether were pointedly left off the list 4. OUSD's pitch: zero fees to mint or redeem, no volume caps, and almost all reserve yield paid back to partners instead of kept by the issuer Circle keeps 100% of the interest earned on USDC's $73 billion in reserves. That's the entire profit engine. OUSD just told every payments company on that list: stop working for Circle for free. CRCL is already down more than 17% after hours of this news
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Jude Soren (@jude_soren) reported@liquidstate_1 @brian_armstrong Totally. Coinbase writes the code and still loses users to a fake login page with worse CSS than the real one. The exploit doesn’t live in the codebase… it lives in the gap between what the system does and what the user believes it’s doing.
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Freyas Fantasy (Commissions Open) (@FreyasFantasys) reported@GGrimmfield its been hell. thats most of the reason im not posting. everything is a waiting game. wait for the server. wait for coinbase. wait for resin. its like i am forced to do a mandatory vacation. its.... kinda nice... actually. but we will be back
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Michael Blau (@blauyourmind) reported@sadbryce I think the @coinbase AI advisor might do a lot to help here once they enable x402 payments from the coinbase app.
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Libs Gonna **** (@TDarp) reported@DOGEELONcoins @coinbase And zero support.
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degenmate (@degenmate) reportedI spent couple years A/B testing conversion on landing pages, and while these recent hero pages are cool asf they don’t convert. Why? - unstructured - user has to scroll to learn the info - explains nothing what is it - missing how to get it sections - doesn’t explain how user life is gonna change from now to after - missing urgency “now” on buttons. People don’t have time to read all stuff, and they won’t, your only way to convert best is make less and more structured in few points and if you hook them they will read further and might download or buy your product. So it’s better to create little more ugly landing pages with structured data and pain points of users than spend time creating amazing hero that looks cool but won’t bring you users. Unless you are in business making cool stuff without revenue. Used @coinbase wallet example here as good structured, performing website for app downloads.
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Morpheu5 Stock Watcher (@Morpheu5Watcher) reportedBITCOIN BOUNCES OFF A 21-MONTH LOW: Bitcoin $BTC at $60,223, up 2.9% over the past 24 hours, is back above $60,000 only hours after touching its lowest price in 21 months - and the stocks wired to it are moving three times as hard. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency, sits at $1,615, up 3.1% over the same stretch. One green day, arriving directly after the worst month the big bitcoin funds have ever recorded, is the whole story tonight - what drove it, and what it does and does not prove. Start with how a thing with no earnings gets a price at all. A share of stock has profits and dividends to anchor a valuation; a coin has neither. Crypto trades on exactly two forces: the flow of money in and out of it, and the price of money itself - interest rates. When rates look set to stay high, assets that pay nothing get sold first; when rate fear eases even slightly, they bounce first. Both forces showed up on schedule this week, one on each side. The outflow side is June, and it was historic. Bitcoin fell 20.5% last month, its steepest monthly drop since June 2022, and the U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs - funds that hold actual bitcoin and trade like a stock, so anyone with a brokerage account can own the coin's move - bled a record $4.5 billion of net withdrawals, their worst month since they launched in January 2024. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust, ticker IBIT, at $34.12 (after hours), +$0.83 / +2.5% today, absorbed roughly $3.55 billion of that on its own, including nine straight days of net selling. Citigroup responded by cutting its one-year bitcoin target from $112,000 to $82,000. That is the hole this bounce is climbing out of - overnight the coin broke below $59,000 before turning. The rate side is today, and it has a name and a place. Kevin Warsh, chair of the Federal Reserve, told the European Central Bank's annual forum in Sintra, Portugal that inflation risks have come down. He promised nothing about policy - he has spent the week insisting prices are still too high - but for an asset that trades on the price of money, one softer sentence from the rate-setter was enough: bitcoin crossed back over $60,000 within hours. A dated footnote from the regulatory world landed the same day: July 1 marked the end of the transition period under MiCA, the European Union's licensing law for crypto firms, and only 244 of the 3,389 companies operating under old national rules won full licenses - Binance, which did not, restricted service in France, Italy, Spain and Poland today. Now the part for a stock investor, because the brokerage-account doors into this market moved very differently from each other today - and that spread is the lesson. The iShares Bitcoin Trust rose about 2.5%, close to the coin itself, because tracking the coin is all it does. Coinbase, ticker COIN, at $160.41 (after hours), +$14.22 / +9.7% today - the largest U.S. crypto exchange, which earns fees when people trade - rose three times the coin's move, helped by its own push beyond crypto into tokenized stocks, options and an in-app advisor, which drew a string of bullish analyst notes this week. Strategy, ticker MSTR, at $95.33 (after hours), +$8.40 / +9.7% today - formerly MicroStrategy, a company that borrowed billions to pile up a bitcoin treasury - matched that for the opposite reason: leverage. The tracker gives you the coin; the businesses give you the coin magnified, up and down alike. Anyone who held Strategy through June felt that magnification pointing the other way. What settles whether tonight was a turn or a twitch is checkable and mostly daily: the ETF flow tallies (do the withdrawals actually stop, or just pause?), whether $60,000 holds longer than a news cycle, and Thursday's 8:30am ET June jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics - the government's count of how many workers employers added to payrolls last month, expected near 114,000 with unemployment around 4.3% - because rates remain the lever this entire asset class hangs from. Crypto is volatile and speculative, and a 3% bounce after a 20% month is the most ordinary thing a falling market does. The bounce is real. So is the hole. Not investment advice.
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VIX (@VictoriaMorantX) reported@CoinMarketCap @JDVance is a scanner now working with Coinbase to freeze people’s assets. There’s a special place in hell for scum like you. You scanned people of billions it’s not enough. **** you.
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Iluminary (@iLuminaryAI) reportedMiCA is fully in force as of today, July 1. No CASP license means no legal right to serve EU clients. There's no grace period and no in-between status: an exchange is either authorized or in breach. Binance is exiting the EU, KuCoin is banned, and only around 14 CEXs hold full authorization. Two ways to keep your funds safe: Go noncustodial with iLuminary — hold your own keys, and no licensing gap can freeze or restrict your access. Use a licensed CASP — Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, Bitstamp, Crypto com, Bitvavo, Bybit EU and a handful of others. Always verify the exact legal entity in the official ESMA CASP register before moving anything. Don't wait to get locked out.
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BlockSign - The Digital Asset Operation Platform (@BlockSign_io) reportedThe hottest topic: Stablecoin Open USD 1. What is Open USD? Open USD, ticker OUSD, is a new U.S.-dollar stablecoin initiative by Open Standard. It was announced on June 30, 2026 and is expected to go live later in 2026. Open Standard describes it as a stablecoin for global money movement, built around three ideas: no mint/redeem fees for businesses, shared reserve economics, and collaborative governance through an independent company backed by partners. The important point: Open USD is not just another stablecoin. It is a distribution coalition. The official partner list includes payment networks, banks, fintechs, exchanges, wallets, infrastructure providers and blockchain ecosystems, including Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, American Express, BlackRock, BNY, Standard Chartered, Google, Shopify, Coinbase, Fireblocks, MetaMask, Solana, Base, Stellar, Polygon, Aptos Labs, Plasma and Tempo. 2. Is it good for users? Potentially yes, but not automatically: For users, the positive development is more competition. If Open USD really creates cheaper, more open stablecoin infrastructure, users could benefit from better availability, faster payments, more wallet/exchange support and potentially lower costs. Reuters reports that Open USD is designed to let businesses mint and redeem without cost or volume limits, while reserve earnings are shared with partners after a management fee. But the user benefit depends on whether companies actually pass those advantages through. A stablecoin can be cheaper at the infrastructure level while the end user still pays fees through wallets, exchanges, payment apps or merchants. 3. Biggest pros The biggest pro is distribution. Open USD has a very strong partner network from day one. Stablecoins win not only through technology, but through where they are accepted, who integrates them, and whether merchants, banks, wallets and payment processors actually use them. The second pro is competition with USDT and USDC. Fortune describes Open USD as a serious challenge to Tether and Circle, and reports that Tether and Circle are not part of the consortium. That matters because the stablecoin market has been highly concentrated around those two issuers. The third pro is governance and shared economics. Open Standard positions Open USD as a stablecoin where governance and economics are shared with the businesses growing adoption, rather than controlled by one dominant issuer. That could be attractive to large institutions that do not want to depend entirely on Circle or Tether. 4. Biggest contras The biggest risk is that the launch details are still incomplete. Open USD is announced, but not live. Fortune reported that Open Standard had not disclosed which blockchain the stablecoin will operate on. The official partner list includes several chain ecosystems, but a partner listing is not the same as a confirmed technical deployment. The third risk is centralization by another name. Open USD may be more open than a single-issuer model, but it is still a consortium of very large financial and technology companies. That can be good for adoption, but it does not automatically mean neutral public infrastructure. This is a real positive fact: Cardano’s native-asset model is technically elegant for stablecoins. Cardano’s developer documentation explains that native tokens are tracked directly by the ledger, without a smart contract for basic transfers, reducing contract-execution risk for simple token movement. 5. How could BlockSign add Open USD? Open USD creates more stablecoin competition. More competition creates more need for trust infrastructure. That is BlockSign’s field. Our conclusion: Open USD is a positive market signal because it increases stablecoin competition and moves the discussion from “who issued the biggest coin?” to “who controls distribution, trust, governance and real-world usage?”
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skinky (afk) (@goatdsalmon) reported@GokuYoppy @blknoiz06 just watch, once it breaks 0.2 a lot of people will have that "oh **** @blknoiz06 is really gonna do this ****" moment and you'll see capital sidelined since WIF Coinbase listing hit the order books. People lack the ability to look ahead into the future. Not me.
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jords (@jords) reportedwould deposit mid-high six figures into coinbase rn if i wasn't convinced they'd freeze my acc or be a pain in the *** haven't used my cb account for ages as i use kraken and my limits are like $3k daily withdraw, support was unhelpful and not willing to be proactive so id rather contort myself to not use them even tho they currently offer something i want (depositing eurc via sol) sad state of affairs
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i.create.tokens (@icreatetokens) reportedMy interest in crypto actually started with the stock market. Back in high school, my economics class gave each student $1 million in fictional money and a copy of the newspaper's stock listings. The goal was simple: invest every last dollar and track your portfolio over the next few weeks. I bought companies like Nike and Pepsi, but the majority of my money went into Wells Fargo. During the exercise, Wells Fargo climbed significantly, and my portfolio took off. Even though the money wasn't real, I was hooked. I loved the idea of owning a tiny piece of a company and watching the market decide what it was worth. The problem was that investing in the mid-'90s wasn't easy. You needed a broker, trades happened during market hours, and getting started felt intimidating. Years later, crypto changed that. Suddenly, markets were open around the clock, and anyone with a smartphone could participate. I knew for years that I wanted to learn crypto. I just didn't know where to begin. Then, in 2020, I downloaded Coinbase. That's where my crypto story really starts.
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Crypto Solutions 🕊️ (@creptosolutions) reportedTL;DR Open USD is a new open, business-focused stablecoin launching later this year, backed by more than 140 global companies across payments, banking, tech, and crypto. Its main goals are: 🟤Free, unlimited minting and redemption for businesses, making it cheaper to use at scale. 🟤Reserve earnings shared with partners, instead of being kept by a single issuer (minus a small operating fee). 🟤Collaborative governance, with decisions made by an independent organization and its partners rather than one company. The initiative aims to solve key problems with existing stablecoins by making them more scalable, cost-effective, and interoperable for global payments. Major supporters include Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase, BlackRock, Google, Shopify, Solana, Ripple, Base, OKX, and Fireblocks, all of whom see Open USD as infrastructure for faster, cheaper, and more reliable internet-native payments. 🔏Privacy angle: Open USD focuses on openness, governance, and interoperability, not privacy. The announcement does not mention privacy-preserving transactions or confidential payments, suggesting transparency and enterprise adoption are prioritized over privacy features.
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Chris Favale (@CFreeze22) reportedHaving issues with my Coinbase One Card rewards sign up bonus. I’m on my 3rd support agent repeating the same information and no one seems to understand what promotions are available. They are requesting me to provide evidence of your promotion. @coinbase @brian_armstrong
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Ownership (@ownershipfm) reportedWhat is @LasoFinance and what does it solve Hunter, Founder of Laso Finance, breaks it down: "What we're solving is privacy at the point of spend. We have assets onchain, ideally earned through work, lending, or perps trading, and we're starting to replace the fiat banking system, which is the goal of our industry. But when we want to spend those assets, we usually send them to Coinbase or Kraken, sell to USD, wire or ACH to a bank account, and pay off a credit card" "In that flow, instead of disintermediating the banking system, we are just doing fiat banking with extra steps. It's worse, by a lot. And we've lost our privacy, which is a core tenet of what can make crypto as an industry successful" "Instead, you take your assets onchain with your wallet, connect to Laso, and get a prepaid card to spend online or through Apple Pay and Google Pay, get gift cards, or initiate bank transfers in the US, the eurozone, and the UK. You can do all of that fully privately. That gets us one step closer to the ultimate goal of crypto, giving the power of the money supply and the banking system back to the people, rather than consolidated to a powerful few" - @huntermmonk
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Fedhabit (@fedhabit) reportedStablecoins are about to become a much tougher business. Yesterday, Coinbase joined more than 140 companies to launch Open USD, a new stablecoin network that competes directly with USDC. Worth noting: Coinbase paid Circle $908 million in 2024 to distribute USDC and now it's backing the competition. What's different isn't the stablecoin. It's the economics. Today's model is simple. Circle issues USDC, the reserves sit in short-term US Treasuries, and the interest on those reserves becomes Circle's biggest source of revenue. Distribution partners help grow adoption and collect fees through separate agreements. Circle keeps the upside. Open USD flips that. Instead of one issuer keeping most of the reserve income, participating companies share it after operating costs. Companies are no longer just distributing a stablecoin. They have a direct financial reason to grow it. The obvious counterargument: we've seen consortium stablecoins before. Paxos launched USDG with the same revenue-sharing model and large backers in 2024. It has $3B in circulation. USDC has $73B. Announcing a consortium is not the same as building a network. But Open USD starts with something previous challengers didn't have. Stripe said OUSD will be the default stablecoin for businesses on its platform. USDC got to $73B because Coinbase distributed it everywhere. If Stripe does the same for OUSD, the comparison to USDG stops making sense. Circle's distribution deal with Coinbase renews in August. The question isn't whether Open USD overtakes USDC. It's whether the model where one issuer captures all the reserve economics still makes sense when the distributors have an alternative.
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Followin (@followin_io) reportedCircle down 17% in a day. The number isn't the story — where it hit is. OUSD isn't "another competitor." It redefines Circle's only real revenue — the reserve float — as something you give back to partners, not keep. And Circle already walked half this road: it hands ~50% of USDC reserve income to Coinbase for distribution. Now Coinbase is on the OUSD list too. A one-off deal just became a 140-partner standard. But a logo wall ≠ a network. Paxos ran this exact playbook with USDG — still under 5% of USDC. This is a repricing of the stablecoin business model, not an obituary for USDC. The whole game now: can OUSD turn 140 logos into real liquidity? USDG couldn't.
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The Arsenal (@MrGooner1990) reported@TenZOfficial @coinbase Lame as ****
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Brandon (@__VitruvianMan) reported@coinbase Beware of Coinbase. It runs the risk of automatically disconnecting your bank account, disabling your ability to withdraw your funds to your bank account. This happened to me and their engineers have been unable to fix the problem after a month. Best to use a different exchange.
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Robert Albert (@Robert_Xrpl) reportedJUST IN: Federal Reserve, IRS, SEC, Social Security, All Bonds: Birth Certificate, Social Security Card, Diploma's, Advanced Degrees, Professional Designations, Marriages, Divorces, Fidelity, Brokerage Accounts: Margin Interest, Loaned Shares for brokerage shorting, Crypto Platforms/Exchanges, ie., Uphold, Binance, Coinbase and All the others that used our XRP or XLM to "stake" and made "Billions" for staking out our XRP. John Deaton did nothing for XRP holders and would never respond to me "EVER" about this issue.
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𝗧.𝗕.𝗦 | 𝗡𝗲𝘄𝘀 & 𝗘𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗻𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 (@TBSSparkEN) reportedTerrible News For XRPL 140+ companies like BlackRock, Coinbase, Mastercard, Stripe and Visa just teamed up to launch Open USD, a new fee-free stablecoin run by an independent group. It’s launching late 2026, Stripe will use it by default, and it’s rolling out on Base and other EVM chains. That’s rough for XRPL because all the liquidity, merchants, and big partners are building on Base/EVM instead. Less reason for businesses to use XRPL rails, which makes it harder for XRP’s stablecoins to compete. #cryptonews #latestupdate
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AShar (@luckyysharmzz) reported@antoniogm are you still working at coinbase?
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Andy the Jet (@GpaAndy) reported@luong4101992 coinbase support boosts $INJ liquidity access significantly
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Dandara Denis 💹🧲 (@DenisDandara) reported🔥🔥#DayInReview🔥🔥 📉 Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw their worst month since launch: investors withdrew $4.5 billion in June, surpassing the previous record outflow by 29%. 👨💻 Ethereum has launched "Ethereum Institutional," a platform designed to attract large-scale investors to the Ethereum ecosystem. 📈 Santiment: Aave recorded its biggest day of network growth in nearly five years as interest in DeFi returns. 📊 Circle is losing 8% of its market share as Stripe, Coinbase, and BlackRock re-enter the competitive stablecoin landscape. 😳 Bitcoin closed the second quarter of 2026 with a 14.1% drop, marking its third consecutive losing quarter. 💻 Grayscale Research: Solana currently hosts over 1,000 applications and processes an average of more than 100 million transactions daily. 🏦 Citigroup lowered its 12-month price targets for Bitcoin and Ethereum to $82,000 and $2,240, down from previous forecasts of $112,000 and $3,175. 🇬🇧 A group of crypto investors in the UK has filed a $200 million lawsuit against Binance and Changpeng Zhao. 📑 The SEC has initiated a review of ETF registration rules. 👨💻 Public token sales have cooled to a four-year low: only 47 ICOs, IDOs, and IEOs took place in Q2 2026, raising a total of $40 million. NEWS
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Franky (@Franky0931) reported@scottmelker This is impossible without help of Binance, Coinbase, or the big boys
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Copium News (@gascope) reportedCircle ($CRCL) slid 18% Tuesday after 140+ firms including Coinbase, Visa, Mastercard, Stripe and BlackRock unveiled rival stablecoin Open USD (OUSD). Stock hit .99 — worst day since March — before recovering ~5% to .54. Still down 75% from 52-week high. Not financial advice. #stablecoins #CRCL