Top US-based crypto exchange platform Coinbase has added President Donald Trump's official memecoin to its listing roadmap.
Former Coinbase CTO Balaji Srinivasan has suggested that Trump airdrop some Trump tokens to every US citizen. Srinivasan explained in a detailed post that Trump needs to be aligned with U.S. citizens,
The official memecoin of the 47th U.S. president will be listed on most major crypto exchanges, even though the MAGA fan token faced trouble getting listed.
Binance and Coinbase plan to list the $TRUMP token as another Solana-based memecoin iDEGEN’s presale officially surpasses $17 million.
Furthermore, instead of issuing these loans on a blockchain even remotely related to Bitcoin (such as Bitcoin sidechains or Bitcoin L2s), Coinbase is issuing them through Morpho Labs, a DeFi platform best described as an AAVE competitor. While Morpho is a well-established platform—and I don’t doubt its security—it has no connection to Bitcoin.
Taking into account the Volume and Open Interest on these contracts, it appears that whales have been targeting a price range from $2.5 to $660.0 for Coinbase Glb over the last 3 months. Looking at the volume and open interest is an insightful way to conduct due diligence on a stock.
At 24 years old, Pryce Yebesi already has one exit: selling his crypto invoicing company Utopia Labs to Coinbase for an undisclosed amount. Some
Coinbase launches Bitcoin-backed loans via Morpho, aiming to tap $45B market by 2030 with accessible, secure, on-chain lending.
Late Thursday, Bloomberg reported that President-elect Donald Trump will likely issue an executive order announcing crypto as a national imperative or priority with a voice in his administration. Trump could also announce the creation of a crypto advisory that will advocate the digital asset industry's policy goals.
The general mood among these heavyweight investors is divided, with 50% leaning bullish and 35% bearish. Among these notable options, 3 are puts, totaling $1,172,579, and 11 are calls, amounting to $473,652.
A federal appeals court says the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission needs to better explain why it turned down a request from Coinbase to develop regulations to cover the booming crypto asset sector — although the judges stopped short of reversing the agency's decision.