A Coinbase and GiveDirectly pilot is giving $12,000 in USDC (a stablecoin) to low-income New Yorkers. The program takes inspiration from universal basic income experiments.
The GENIUS Act’s stablecoin yield ban fuels fintech innovation as exchanges exploit loopholes, threatening traditional banks’ ...
Coinbase has been mulling such a move since April. Since then, other crypto firms such as Circle, Ripple and Paxos have ...
Digital assets exchange Coinbase  (NASDAQ:COIN) announced it's bringing more seamless, global peer-to-peer payments to its ...
Coinbase is reportedly taking another step toward integrating traditional finance and crypto infrastructure by applying for a ...
Coinbase Ripple efforts in seeking national banking licenses highlight crypto’s push into TradFi, raising questions on ...
Coinbase applied for a license to enable it to act more like a national payments and custody provider, without becoming a ...
Coinbase has filed an application with the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) for a National Trust Company ...
Crypto exchange Coinbase said in a statement on Friday that it is seeking a National Trust Company Charter from the Office of ...
Coinbase has no plans of becoming a full-service bank, according to Tusar. Instead, he described the trust bank application ...
Coinbase applies for a crypto banking license, joining Ripple and Circle in seeking federal credentials to expand crypto ...
Coinbase and GiveDirectly launch Future First, a USDC pilot in New York to support low-income residents and boost crypto use.