Coinbase and Block shares rise as both impress in second quarter
Shares in Coinbase Global Inc. and Block Inc. rose in late trading today as they both impressed investors and Block announced a new sales strategy.
For its second quarter that ended June 30, Coinbase reported adjusted earnings per share of 14 cents, up from a loss of 42 cents in the same quarter of the previous year, on revenue of $1.45 billion, up 105% year-over-year. Earnings were a big miss, as analysts were expecting 95 cents per share, but revenue came in ahead of an expected $1.398 billion.
Coinbase’s strong revenue figure was driven by a 146% increase in cryptocurrency trading volume, to $226 billion in the quarter, in line with estimates, with institution trading volume growing 142%, to $189 billion. Retail trading volume jumped 164%, to $37 billion.
Subscription and services revenue came in at $599 million in the quarter, custodial fee revenue rose to $34.5 million, up from $17 million a year prior and total transaction revenue grew 138% year-over-year, to $780.9 million.
“In addition to solid financial results and continuing to build trusted products to help drive crypto adoption, Coinbase and the crypto industry made great strides towards achieving regulatory clarity in the U.S., which we believe will be a major unlock for innovation in the industry,” the company said in a letter to shareholders.
For its fiscal third quarter, Coinbase expects subscription and services revenue of $530 million and $600 million, up from $334 million in the same quarter of fiscal 2023. Shares rose just over 3% in late trading.
By contrast, Block shares rose nearly 5% as the company reported adjusted earnings per share of 93 cents, ahead of a forecast 84 cents, on revenue of $6.16 billion, shy of an expected $6.26 billion.
Block reported a gross profit of $2.23 billion, up 20% year-over-year and net income of $195.3 million, up 91%. The company CashApp business saw a gross profit of $1.3 billion in the quarter, up 23% year-over-year, with the number of Cash App Card monthly active users growing 13%, to 24 million as of the end of June.
The company’s subscription and services-based revenue came in at $1.79 billion, up 22% year-over-year and subscription and services saw a gross profit of $1.5 billion, up 27%.
Of particular interest to investors was a plan by Block, detailed in a letter to shareholders, to position its Cash App as the primary financial services partner of choice for families earning up to $150,000.
Referred to the letter as “bank the base,” the strategy is focused on driving engagement through increased adoption of Block’s financial services products. Already in testing, the strategy includes incentivizing new and existing customers to drive new paycheck deposit activities and hence, drive future growth.
“It is about making Cash App our base’s primary financial tool,” said Amrita Ahuja, chief financial officer of Block. “Which ultimately leads to stronger engagement and stronger inflows.”
In addition, Block also appointed Afterpay co-founder Nick Monlar as its head of sales as part of its new strategy. Afterpay is a buy-now, pay-later service acquired by Block, then known as Square Inc., for $29 billion in 2021. “It will result in much better technology, much better design and much better products,” Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey is reported to have said on an earnings call.
For its fiscal third quarter, Block expects to see a gross profit of $2.22 billion on 17% year-over-year growth and adjusted earnings of $695 million. For the full year, the company expects gross profit of $8.89 billion — revised up from a previous outlook of $8.78 billion and adjusted earnings of $2.9 billion, also revised up from $2.76 billion previously.
Image: SiliconANGLE/Ideogram
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