Crypto and Coinbase Bull Run Call. Stock Price Seen Tripling.
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Coinbase Global
has garnered a startling upgrade, with one analyst seeing a case for shares in the cryptocurrency broker to rip almost three times higher amid a new bullish streak in the price of
Bitcoin
and other digital assets.
Bo Pei, an analyst at U.S. Tiger Securities, upgraded Coinbase (ticker: COIN) to Buy from Hold, raising his price target on the stock to $200 from $65. The move makes him by far the most bullish of more than 20 analysts surveyed by FactSet.
Shares in Coinbase closed at $75.14 on Tuesday. The last time the stock was above $200 was a year ago.
“Crypto has started a new bull run, and so has Coinbase,” Pei said in a Monday note. “We believe crypto price is the main factor to consider when investing in Coinbase. We believe a crypto bull market will drive significant revenue growth.”
Indeed, crypto prices have proved to be a key factor for Coinbase stock, for several reasons. Not only is Coinbase a stock that often moves in step with the price of Bitcoin, but the core of the broker’s business—despite increasing efforts to diversify—remains rooted in fee-based crypto trading. Bull markets means its core audience of retail investors flocks to buy digital assets, while bear markets, like the current one, push investors away and weigh on revenue.
And digital assets are on an impressive winning streak. While Bitcoin remains well below its late 2021 high near $69,000, the largest crypto has rallied some 70% so far this year from the depths of a bear market . The price has hit its highest point since June, when the crypto crash accelerated with a string of bankruptcies.
“Our thesis assumes that a new crypto bull market has begun and Coinbase’s revenue and profit could recover to its 2021 level, when Coinbase was trading at above $200,” said Pei. The analyst also pointed to historical trends in Bitcoin price moves—including anticipation of the next “halving,” which decreases Bitcoin issuance—as further evidence of the bullish streak, along with upside for Ether prices.
Nevertheless, Pei sees some risks for Coinbase, chief among which is regulation. U.S. lawmakers and regulators have taken a much harder look at crypto companies in the past year. Scrutiny has only accelerated after the collapse of FTX and the meltdowns of two banks that served the digital-asset industry.
The implosions of
Silvergate Capital
and Signature Bank were initially a setback for crypto prices, but Bitcoin has rallied in response to wider concerns about banks that have gripped the U.S.
“The recent Bitcoin rally after the Silicon Valley Bank crisis suggests investors have started recognizing Bitcoin’s value as a decentralized and transparent asset,” said Pei. That puts the analyst in the camp of bulls who see the recent rise in prices as evidence that traders are flocking to Bitcoin as a result of its principles of financial decentralization—even though there may be something else at play.
Stresses across the banking sector have been an unintended consequence of the Federal Reserve ratcheting up interest rates over the past year in a bid to rein in inflation—a trend that has also slammed Bitcoin. With cracks appearing at banks, traders now expect the Fed to be more accommodative and even see a situation in which rates are cut this year, which would be a boost for prices.
That doesn’t change Pei’s thesis that Coinbase will benefit from a new crypto bull run, but it does underscores just how vulnerable Bitcoin and Coinbase—like many tech stocks—are to changes in U.S. monetary policy.
Write to Jack Denton at jack.denton@barrons.com