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Some Fortune Crypto pricing data is provided by Binance.
CompaniesCoinbase

Exclusive: Coinbase buys token manager Liquifi as crypto M&A heats up

By
Ben Weiss
Ben Weiss
Crypto Reporter
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By
Ben Weiss
Ben Weiss
Crypto Reporter
Down Arrow Button Icon
July 2, 2025, 8:00 AM ET
Brian Armstrong speaks on stage at a conference.
Brian Armstrong, cofounder and CEO of Coinbase.Stefan Wermut—Bloomberg/Getty Images

In 2024, the U.S.’s largest crypto exchange acquired three companies. This year, Coinbase has already bought five, including its most recent acquisition: the token management platform Liquifi. Aklil Ibssa, head of corporate development at Coinbase, declined to disclose the terms of the deal, which the company announced on Wednesday.

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Liquifi last raised $5 million in a 2022 seed round led by the venture capital firm Dragonfly, with participation from crypto luminaries like Katie Haun and Balaji Srinivasan. Well-known crypto companies like the Uniswap Foundation, OP Labs, Ethena, and Zora use the platform to track who owns what stake of a cryptocurrency, distribute tokens after vesting periods, and manage the intricacies of tax withholdings. 

“Token creation and cap table management is part of the process,” Ibssa told Fortune, referring to the life cycle of a cryptocurrency. “If we want to bring a billion people on chain, this process needs to be much easier and less broken.”

Liquifi has compared itself to the private equity-management platform Carta, which lets investors manage stakes in traditional equity deals. In December, a competitor Toku sued Liquifi for allegedly conspiring with an ex-employee for stealing confidential business documents. Liquifi has denied any wrongdoing, and Coinbase has said it will help the firm in its defense.

“We’re ten toes deep with Liquifi and in their corner,” said Ibssa. “We’ve done rigorous diligence on this.

Coinbase’s acquisition of Liquifi is the latest in a wave of mergers and acquisitions in crypto. This year, Coinbase acquired Spindl, a crypto-based advertisement company; the team behind Iron Fish, a privacy-focused blockchain; and the team behind Roam, a blockchain-based search engine. And in May, Coinbase announced the blockbuster acquisition of the crypto derivatives company Deribit for $2.9 billion. It’s the biggest purchase of a crypto company in the industry’s 16-year history.

Coinbase isn’t the only heavyweight buying up companies. The fintech giant Stripe officially bought the stablecoin startup Bridge for $1.1 billion in February. And, in June, Stripe announced its purchase of the crypto wallet firm Privy for an undisclosed price.

End-to-end

Coinbase’s decision to acquire Liquifi puts the crypto exchange the closest it’s been to competitors like Binance and OKX, which have what they call “launchpads,” or platforms that let projects easily launch their own cryptocurrencies. Rather than collect fees simply after a token is listed, Binance earns money earlier on in a cryptocurrency’s life cycle.

Liquifi isn’t a launchpad, but it expands Coinbase’s repertoire beyond merely listing tokens. “It gets us one step closer to that end-to-end platform,” said Ibssa.

As opposed to Binance, Coinbase is a publicly traded company in the U.S. and regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Under Gary Gensler, the former chair under President Joe Biden, the SEC argued that the vast majority of cryptocurrencies—like Solana and XRP—are akin to securities, or financial assets like stocks and bonds that must register with the agency.

Ibssa, the Coinbase executive, said that his company would have acquired Liquifi even under Gensler. Still, the pro-crypto administration under President Donald Trump lets the exchange make more ambitious moves, he said.

“Regulatory clarity allows us to take bigger swings,” he added.

Correction, July 2, 2025: A previous version of this article misstated the number of companies Coinbase acquired in 2025. It’s five, not four.

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By Ben WeissCrypto Reporter
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Ben Weiss is a crypto reporter at Fortune.

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