With an estimated value of $100 billion, it’s hard to believe that a company like Coinbase needs to acquire new businesses to grow. But with $10 billion in cash on hand, the US’s biggest cryptocurrency exchange continues to seek out the next big opportunity in the sector.
Coinbase has not been shy about writing checks in 2025. The exchange reportedly paid $2.9 billion in a cash-and-stock acquisition of cryptocurrency options trading platform Deribit in August.
Then came its headline-grabbing $375 million acquisition of onchain capital raising platform Echo in October. Crypto Twitter was buzzing over the news, thanks to some genius marketeering involving Echo’s founder and influencer Cobie, who received an additional $25 million from Coinbase to relaunch his long-dormant UpOnly podcast.
The headlines tell a story of fortune-making handshakes between Coinbase and unicorn founders, but there is significant intent, research and conviction behind these multimillion-dollar moves.
So how does @Coinbase, a $100B company with $10B of cash on hand, decide what companies to invest in?
— Gareth Jenkinson (@gazza_jenks) October 28, 2025
Coinbase has made 40+ acquisitions in recent years, most recently forking out $375 to acquire @echodotxyz.
Here’s the secret playbook for Coinbase’ merger and acquisition… pic.twitter.com/PwgOeJ5Uuf
To unpack how Coinbase is investing billions in specific companies, Cointelegraph spoke to Aklil Ibbsa, Coinbase’s head of corporate development and M&A, on its daily “Chain Reaction” livestream show on X.
Related: Coinbase splashes $25M to revive a podcast from the last bull run
Power law distribution
Ibssa has been leading global corporate development at Coinbase since 2019 and has been intimately involved in all of the firm’s major acquisitions.
“In many ways, it is a power law distribution. If you’re thinking about how to continue to grow Coinbase or grow any potential acquirer that you’re working on, you’re going to take a lot of shots on goal. Not every single one is going to be a great shot on goal, but the winners really start to pay for the rest of the portfolio,” Ibssa said.
Related: Coinbase bets $375M that onchain ICO crowdfunding is crypto’s next wave
Ibssa highlighted mergers and acquisitions as a prime example of this approach. Describing their moves like an “ESPN highlight” reel, the company has enjoyed some successful and not-so-successful business deals over the past six years.
Ibssa said that a handful remain top of mind, including Coinbase’s reported $41 million deal for Tagomi, which became the basis of Coinbase Prime.
“Coinbase Prime, in our institutional business, now makes up a significant portion of our revenue so I would toss that on the ESPN highlight reel.”
Ibssa also highlighted the company’s 2019 deal to acquire Xapo’s institutional businesses. He described the impact of that deal as “single-handedly making us the largest crypto custodian on the planet at the time.”
The exchange’s $2.9 billion acquisition of Deribit is by far the largest in 2025, and Ibssa said that post-close, the deal has shown “really strong financial performance.”
“Who doesn’t want to get acquired by Coinbase?”
“What does the desk look like? Coinbase is a nearly $100 billion company with close to $10 billion of cash, so who doesn’t want to get acquired by Coinbase?” Ibssa said.
He describes the job as “very fast-paced,” with multiple potential M&A deals stacked on his desk at any given time. Deciding on what deals to pursue has been based on opportunities that could become extensions of Coinbase’s overall product strategy.
“We have a very clear strategy and direction for the business and M&A is just a tool for us to help accelerate getting there faster.”
Coinbase’s overall strategy follows this mantra: Identify and back companies, products and services that accelerate its goal of being an “everything exchange.”
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