TradesZ

Is COIN a buy? — what our data shows

⚡ TradesZ research ·Updated June 22, 2026 ·~2 min read ·Grounded in SEC data

Coinbase is the largest crypto exchange in the United States — it's basically the place where everyday people and big institutions go to buy, sell, and store Bitcoin, Ethereum, and hundreds of other digital currencies.

What our data shows

Our data on Coinbase covers two things. On the big-money side, 65 major investment funds report holding it — and these aren't small players: Berkshire Hathaway, Tiger Global, and Coatue are all on the list. When funds like those take a position, it tends to mean they're making a long-term bet, not just a quick trade. We also have two congressional trading disclosures tied to Coinbase, meaning a couple of U.S. lawmakers reported making a move in the stock — though we can't tell from the filings whether they were buying or selling, so we won't read too much into that.

🟢 Institutional ownership (13F)
What you see
65 13F filings name COIN — including top funds Berkshire Hathaway, Tiger Global Management, Coatue Management.
What it means
Large, well-known funds hold a long position here.
How to read it
13F positions are long positions (often read as bullish) — they lag ~45 days and guarantee nothing.
→ See smart money
Congressional trades
What you see
2 lawmakers reported a trade in COIN (incl. Hon. Gilbert Cisneros, Hon. Tim Moore).
What it means
Politicians with possible information advantage traded this stock.
How to read it
Can be a signal — the exact direction (buy/sell) is not always in the official filing.
→ See congressional trades

The takeaway

🟢Bullish lean

The heavyweight fund interest is the real signal here — it suggests serious, patient money sees something in crypto's future. The thing to watch is whether that institutional conviction grows or starts to quietly fade.

But watch out
Smart-money signals lag the market (13F filings ~45 days) and never guarantee direction — always check the latest price and news yourself.

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Informational research, not personalized investment advice.