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Coinbase and Amazon stocks are plunging after failing to satisfy their shareholders

In this post:

  • Coinbase shares fell 15% after reporting a major drop in Q2 profit due to weak trading activity.
  • Amazon stock dropped 7% despite beating earnings estimates, as investors remained unimpressed.
  • Crypto markets slipped after President Trump announced new tariffs, triggering liquidations and selloffs.

Coinbase shares crashed 15% on Friday after the company disappointed investors with weak second-quarter numbers. The crypto exchange posted a sharp drop in adjusted profit, pushing its stock to $321.68, the lowest it’s been in over a month.

The selloff, which wiped out $14.3 billion in value, came after Coinbase reported just $33.2 million in adjusted income, way down from the $294.4 million it brought in during the same quarter last year.

The results landed badly across Wall Street, where expectations had already been high after Coinbase joined the S&P 500 in May and ran up 52% year-to-date going into the earnings.

According to Reuters, analyst Michael Miller from Morningstar called the shares “significantly overvalued,” adding, “We believe that the market is projecting too much future growth for the firm.”

H.C. Wainwright analysts echoed that, saying, “We believe investor enthusiasm had reached a ‘fever pitch’ heading into last night’s results, as valuation has detached from underlying fundamentals.”

Crypto slowdown drags Coinbase down

The weak results were tied directly to slower trading. Coinbase struggled with low trading volumes throughout the quarter as the recent bullish sentiment in crypto markets made traders hold onto assets instead of selling. Less trading meant less revenue for the exchange, and that hit profits hard. The volatility that Coinbase normally benefits from just wasn’t there during the period.

Meanwhile, Robinhood reported that its crypto trading revenue nearly doubled during the same quarter. Robinhood has a much smaller presence in the crypto market than Coinbase, but it managed to pull ahead due to a spike in trading activity. That contrast only deepened the pressure on Coinbase to explain the drop.

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Some analysts think the slowdown may be temporary. Coinbase’s revenue estimates for July pointed to stronger activity, likely boosted by the Genius Act, which became law that same month.

The legislation fueled a new wave of crypto optimism, sending bitcoin to an all-time high and possibly reigniting the kind of trading activity Coinbase needs to recover. But none of that helped the company on Friday, when investors responded directly to the second-quarter collapse.

The earnings miss also hit other crypto-related stocks. Circle fell 4%, Galaxy Digital dropped 2%, and Bitmine Immersion, which holds ether reserves, tumbled 8%. MicroStrategy, which holds a large bitcoin treasury, lost 5%. Coinbase was the worst hit among them all.

Amazon slips after earnings call disappoints Wall Street

Amazon also took a beating. The company released its second-quarter earnings on Thursday and beat expectations in most categories, but it wasn’t enough. The stock dropped during the conference call and closed 7% lower on Friday. For the year, it’s now down around 1%, a rare position for a company that usually stays on the green side of the chart.

The market’s reaction made it clear that beating estimates alone wasn’t enough anymore, not without stronger signals on growth, margins, or strategy going forward.

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At the same time, crypto markets were hit by a broader pullback after President Donald Trump introduced a revised version of his “reciprocal” tariffs targeting multiple countries.

Bitcoin managed to stay roughly flat, but other top tokens didn’t. Ether, XRP, and Binance Coin all lost 2%. Overnight, bitcoin touched $114,110.73, triggering long liquidations across the board. That means traders using leverage were forced to sell when the price dropped.

Bitcoin saw $172 million worth of these forced sales in 24 hours. Ether lost even more, with $210 million in liquidations on centralized exchanges.

Even after a strong July, where bitcoin rose 8% and ether soared 49%, the mood has changed. Uncertainty is back. Lower trading volumes and higher volatility in August are making investors nervous. That has everyone watching whether the momentum will last.

ETF flows also showed cracks. Ether ETFs pulled in over $5 billion in July. There was only one outflow day—July 2, when $1.8 million came out. That pushed cumulative inflows for ether ETFs to $9.64 billion. But bitcoin ETFs saw the reverse. $114 million left bitcoin ETFs on the last day of July, dropping the monthly net inflow to $6 billion. That’s out of a total of $55 billion that’s gone into bitcoin ETFs overall so far.

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Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

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