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Coinbase to Face Narrowed Shareholder Lawsuit After Judge’s Partial Dismissal

A U.S. federal judge has ruled that Coinbase must face a narrowed shareholder lawsuit alleging it misled investors about key business risks, including the likelihood of being sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

In a 59-page ruling issued Tuesday night, Judge Brian Martinotti of the U.S. District Court in New Jersey rejected Coinbase’s bid for a full dismissal of the case. The lawsuit accuses the cryptocurrency exchange and several of its top executives and board members of fraudulently concealing regulatory and financial risks in public statements over a two-year period.

The shareholders allege Coinbase made misleading claims suggesting it was unlikely to face SEC enforcement, and that customer assets would remain protected even if the company filed for bankruptcy. These statements, made through earnings calls, regulatory filings, blog posts, and social media, allegedly inflated investor confidence.

Judge Martinotti ruled that plaintiffs could not proceed based solely on “group pleading”, where statements in company-wide documents do not specify individual responsibility. However, he allowed the lawsuit to continue for claims where investors provided specific allegations tied to individual defendants, writing, “Where plaintiffs have appropriately provided defendant-by-defendant particularity, the claims must remain.”

In a notable aside, Martinotti criticized the lack of clarity in the plaintiffs’ filings, remarking humorously, “Judges are not like pigs, hunting for truffles buried in briefs.”

Coinbase called the ruling a “significant step forward,” saying it would continue to “vigorously defend against any remaining claims.” Attorneys representing the shareholders did not immediately respond to media requests.

The case stems from major stock drops in 2022 and 2023, including a 26% plunge on May 11, 2022 after Coinbase reported disappointing revenues and added new risk disclosures, and a 12% drop on June 6, 2023 following the SEC lawsuit alleging the company operated as an unregistered securities exchange.

The class action, led by Swedish pension fund Sjunde AP-Fonden, covers investors who bought Coinbase shares between April 14, 2021, and June 5, 2023.

The SEC’s own case against Coinbase was dropped in February 2025, after the Trump administration moved to loosen federal oversight of the cryptocurrency sector, marking a major shift in the U.S. regulatory approach to digital assets.

The case is In re Coinbase Global Inc. Securities Litigation, U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey, No. 22-04915.

Trump-Backed World Liberty Financial to Launch Crypto Debit Card by Early 2026

World Liberty Financial, the cryptocurrency venture backed by the family of U.S. President Donald Trump, plans to launch a crypto-linked debit card that will allow users to spend digital assets in everyday transactions as early as late 2025, according to CEO Zach Witkoff.

Speaking at the TOKEN2049 crypto conference in Singapore on Wednesday, Witkoff said the card aims to “bridge crypto assets with everyday spending,” and a pilot program is scheduled for launch next quarter. “We’ll be rolling out a debit card that will either go live in Q4 or Q1 2026,” he added.

Witkoff was joined on stage by Donald Trump Jr., co-founder of World Liberty, where both reiterated their optimistic view on cryptocurrency adoption and highlighted what they described as progress made under the Trump administration. Their comments drew cheers from attendees, reflecting the strong enthusiasm among crypto investors for the Trump family’s growing involvement in the sector.

A CRYPTO-POWERED FINANCIAL PLATFORM

Founded in 2024, World Liberty Financial (WLF) seeks to provide decentralized finance (DeFi) services, allowing users to access financial tools and payments directly through cryptocurrencies without traditional banking intermediaries.

In September 2024, the company launched its governance token $WLFI, granting holders voting rights on business proposals. According to data from CoinGecko, the token last traded 0.5% higher at $0.2011.

Witkoff confirmed that World Liberty is working on tokenizing real-world assets, including real estate, oil, and gas, as part of its long-term strategy. “We also want USD1 to be the base pair for these assets because we view it as the most trustworthy and transparent stablecoin on Earth,” Witkoff said, referring to the firm’s U.S. dollar–pegged stablecoin.

TRUMP FAMILY’S ROLE AND PROFITS

While critics have accused the Trump family of profiting from crypto ventures amid the administration’s relaxed regulatory stance, Donald Trump Jr. insisted that World Liberty Financial is “100% not a political organization.”

Reuters estimates that since its founding, the Trump family has earned around $500 million from the project — a figure based on publicly disclosed deals, crypto transaction data, and the company’s terms and conditions.

During the conference, Trump Jr. said, “My father was the first guy to run as sort of a pro-crypto president,” while Witkoff recalled early skepticism from the industry. “They called us a joke, a memecoin — they said we’d never amount to anything,” he said, before adding that World Liberty is now partnering with Aptos, a leading blockchain platform, to bring its USD1 stablecoin to the network.

The company’s planned debit card marks the next step in World Liberty’s expansion, reflecting its ambition to make digital currency spending mainstream while strengthening its ties to the global crypto ecosystem.

Tether targets $500B valuation in planned $20B raise, report says

Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin issuer, is exploring a massive fundraising round that could value the company at $500 billion, according to Bloomberg News.

Fundraising details

  • Tether is seeking $15–20 billion through a private placement, offering roughly a 3% stake.

  • Sources cautioned the figures are top-end targets and could come in lower, depending on investor appetite and final terms.

  • CEO Paolo Ardoino confirmed in a post on X that the company is evaluating a raise from “a selected group of high-profile investors,” but gave no specifics.

Tether’s market position

  • USDT stablecoin: Pegged to the U.S. dollar, with a market cap of $173B (CoinGecko).

  • Dominates global stablecoin trading, enabling crypto-to-crypto transactions with reduced volatility.

  • Recently announced a U.S.-focused stablecoin, USAT, as part of efforts to expand in America.

  • In August, Tether appointed Bo Hines, a former White House crypto policy executive, as a strategic adviser to bolster U.S. presence.

Competitive landscape

  • Circle, issuer of the USDC stablecoin, went public in June in a blockbuster U.S. IPO.

  • A $500B valuation would make Tether one of the most highly valued companies in global finance, exceeding the market caps of many multinational banks.

Political backdrop

Tether’s plans come amid favorable crypto policies under President Donald Trump, whose administration has embraced digital assets and loosened regulatory barriers compared to prior years.

If successful, the raise would not only cement Tether’s dominance in the stablecoin market but also reshape the global crypto industry by making it the highest-valued digital asset firm in history.