Coinbase is in talks with Bybit on a strategic equity investment that would hand the U.S.-based exchange a stake in one of the largest offshore crypto platforms operating today. Across the crypto sector, major exchanges have been moving toward regulatory alignment and cross-border partnerships at a pace not seen before. Both companies have clear reasons to pursue this partnership and could benefit greatly.
Coinbase is not looking to absorb Bybit, as the discussions point to an equity position that leaves both platforms running their own operations independently. That distinction matters for how the deal would function in practice.
Coinbase gains exposure to markets where Bybit already has deep roots, especially across Asia and several fast-growing emerging markets. Bybit, on the other hand, gets proximity to a company that has spent years building compliance systems inside one of the most demanding regulatory environments in the world.
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Coinbase went public in 2021 and has since maintained a visible regulatory track record in the U.S. That kind of credibility is not easily replicated, and for Bybit, it could prove more useful than capital alone.
Bybit does not currently offer full services to U.S.-based customers. The barriers are that well-known companies must secure money transmitter licenses in nearly every state. Additionally, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is navigating continued SEC scrutiny over products such as staking and token listings. These requirements create a complex regulatory environment that can slow expansion and raise compliance costs. The cost and time involved in meeting those requirements have kept several international exchanges on the sidelines.
A working relationship with Coinbase could change that calculation for Bybit. Coinbase already holds the necessary licenses and has tested its compliance systems against federal and state regulators over multiple years. Still, any real U.S. expansion for Bybit would move in stages.
A separately licensed U.S. entity would likely come first, with product rollouts following as approvals come through. The path is long, but a partner with existing infrastructure removes some of the early friction.
Reports connected to the deal place Bybit’s valuation at around $25 billion. That number puts it in the same range as other top-tier global exchanges and draws a direct comparison to OKX. Recently, they secured backing from Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company behind the New York Stock Exchange.
The figure is grounded in concrete business metrics. Bybit is in the top five in terms of spot and derivatives trade volume within the world market. Its audience is distributed in many regions, with Asia showing very good figures. The platform also runs its own matching engine technology, which carries weight when institutional investors are assessing long-term infrastructure value. The $25 billion mark, if accurate, would make Bybit one of the most valuable privately held platforms in the entire crypto space.
The reported talks between Coinbase and Bybit fit a pattern that has been building quietly across the industry. Large platforms are no longer competing purely on trading features or fee structures. Regulatory capacity and licensed market access have become assets in their own right, and partnerships are the fastest way to acquire them.
Smaller exchanges without that foundation may find the competitive gap widening as these alliances form. Regulators in the U.S. will almost certainly scrutinize any formal agreement, given Coinbase’s obligations as a publicly listed company under SEC rules. Official disclosure requirements alone could bring the deal into public view before either party chooses to comment. Until then, confirmation from Coinbase or Bybit remains the next real development worth watching.
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