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Coinbase CEO announces major restructuring before earnings

There is a particular kind of corporate announcement that tries to play it safe and be two things at once - a show of strength on one end, and an admission of reality on the other. Coinbase seems to have joined the group.

The crypto exchange company announced it is cutting approximately 14% of its workforce. According to Forbes, that is roughly 700 employees, just days before its first quarter 2026 earnings report on May 7. The restructuring is being framed as an AI efficiency play. But the timing, in a down crypto market with trading volumes falling significantly despite Bitcoin trading slightly above $81,000, makes it clear this is also a cost-survival move.

Coinbase (COIN) gained 4.1% on Tuesday, May 5, 2026, following the announcement, briefly reaching an intraday high of $208 before pulling back below $200 at close. The market's initial enthusiasm gave way to skepticism, and the stock ended lower. Earnings on May 7 will be the first real test of whether the restructuring signals a smarter, leaner Coinbase, or a company under pressure.

Co-founder and CEO Brian Armstrong didn't dress up the moment. "We are adjusting early and deliberately to rebuild Coinbase to be lean, fast, and AI-native. We need to return to the speed and focus of our startup founding, with AI at our core," Armstrong wrote on X.

Why Coinbase is restructuring around AI, and what it means for how the company will operate

Armstrong cited two forces driving the decision: market cyclicality and the accelerating capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI).

The AI rationale is not window dressing. The restructuring will eliminate layers of management and eliminate the concept of "pure managers" entirely. Every leader must be a contributor. Armstrong described the new model as "player coaches, getting their hands dirty alongside their teams."

More Layoffs:

The new structure will concentrate around what Armstrong called "AI native talent who can manage fleets of agents to drive outsized impact."

Coinbase is also experimenting with significantly reduced team sizes, including single-person pods, where engineers, designers, and product managers collapse into one role, according to Armstrong's blog post.

"The pace of what's possible with a small, focused team has changed dramatically, and it's accelerating every day," Armstrong wrote.

The restructuring drew immediate pushback from users who raised concerns about non-technical staff shipping production code.

According to Yahoo Finance, a 2025 data breach that exposed 69,461 Coinbase accounts remains fresh in customers' memories, and the prospect of AI-generated code being deployed more broadly has amplified trust concerns. Armstrong responded directly, stating that all AI-generated code passes human review before deployment.

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What Wall Street expects from Coinbase's May 7 earnings amid the restructuring

The restructuring announcement lands just before one of the most consequential earnings prints in Coinbase's recent history.

Coinbase analyst consensus for Q1 2026 projects:

  • Revenue of approximately $1.50 billion, with a range of $1.39 billion to $1.77 billion
  • Earnings per share of $0.10, with a wide range of $0.77 loss to $0.96 gain.
  • The previous quarter's EPS was a loss of $2.49, and revenue for that quarter came in at $705.93 million.

    Source: TipRanks

The sequential revenue jump from $705.93 million to a projected $1.50 billion reflects the surge in crypto market activity that defined the first quarter.

But trading volumes have since softened meaningfully, raising questions about whether Q1 represents a peak or a plateau.

Related: Goldman Sachs cuts Coinbase target as outlook turns cautious

Analyst sentiment heading into the print is broadly constructive. According to TipRanks, COIN has received 14 Buy ratings, seven Hold ratings, and three Sell ratings in the current month.

The average analyst price target over the past three months sits at $260.60, implying significant upside from the current price of $197.75 May 5 closing bell.

What the Coinbase restructuring signals about where crypto companies are heading in 2026

The Coinbase move is not happening in isolation. Across the technology sector, companies are using AI capability as justification for workforce reductions, compressing headcount while arguing that smaller, AI-enabled teams can deliver equivalent or greater output.

For Coinbase specifically, the bet is that AI-native infrastructure can sustain growth through a crypto down cycle without the overhead costs that made previous downturns so painful. The company emerged from the 2022 crypto winter with a much leaner operation than it entered. Armstrong is trying to repeat that playbook before the pain gets worse.

The risk is real. User trust is already strained. A major data breach from 2025 is not forgotten. And telling customers that AI is now more deeply embedded in the code and runs financial accounts requires more than a blog post to reassure. The May 7 earnings will answer the financial questions, but the trust question will take a little longer to resolve.

Related: Cathie Wood buys $28.7 million of tumbling megacap stock

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This story was originally published May 5, 2026 at 10:21 PM.