Monitors display Coinbase signage during the company’s initial public offering at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York City on April 14, 2021.
Robert Nickelsberg | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said Tuesday that the company will cut roughly 14% of its workforce, citing a combination of market volatility and AI quickly changing how the company operates.
The move comes ahead of Coinbase’s first-quarter earnings, which the company is scheduled to report Thursday. Shares were up nearly 4% in premarket trading.
In a memo to employees, which he shared on X early Tuesday, Armstrong described the decision as necessary to position the firm for its “next phase of growth” while navigating the current downturn in the crypto market. He cited two “forces converging at the same time”: the current pullback in the crypto market and “AI changing how we work.”
Although crypto is “on the verge of the next wave of adoption,” he said, “our business is still volatile from quarter to quarter … we’re currently in a down market and need to adjust our cost structure now so that we emerge from this period leaner, faster, and more efficient for our next phase of growth.”
Furthermore, “the pace of what’s possible with a small, focused team has changed dramatically, and it’s accelerating every day,” he said about AI. “We are adjusting early and deliberately to rebuild Coinbase to be lean, fast, and AI-native. We need to return to the speed and focus of our startup founding, with AI at our core.”
Coinbase’s move comes amid a broader wave of tech industry layoffs tied to a ramp in AI investment. Earlier this year, Block announced a reduction of “nearly half” of its workforce, citing an “opportunity to move faster with smaller, highly talented teams using AI to automate more work.”
Other companies like Pinterest, CrowdStrike and Chegg have recently announced job cuts attributing the layoffs to AI reshaping their workforces.
Coinbase isn’t pivoting away from crypto, however. Armstrong reaffirmed his bullish outlook on crypto, pointing to stablecoins and tokenization, as well as prediction markets, as drivers of the “next wave of adoption.”
Across the crypto industry, exchanges are moving away from the hype-driven, returns-focused revenue streams that originally fueled their growth and are instead entering a more disciplined phase centered around steadier revenue, regulation, compliance, and institutional adoption.
This isn’t the first time Coinbase has carried out layoffs during a crypto downturn, it made significant cuts during the 2022 market decline.

