Brian Armstrong Turns Coinbase Earnings Call Into a Real-Time Prediction Market
Coinbase’s latest earnings call took an unexpected turn when CEO Brian Armstrong turned a lighthearted joke into a live experiment in prediction markets.
Toward the end of the call, Armstrong deliberately dropped a series of crypto buzzwords – “Bitcoin,” “Ethereum,” “blockchain,” “staking,” and “Web3” – instantly deciding the outcome of active bets on platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi.
These markets had allowed users to wager on which words would appear during Coinbase’s quarterly call. After Armstrong’s offhand remarks, odds for several terms spiked to 100%, guaranteeing payouts for those who had predicted correctly. He later admitted that someone had shared one of the markets with him before the call and that he thought it would be “fun” to play along.
Not everyone agreed. Some in the industry applauded the joke as a harmless nod to crypto culture, while others saw it as poor judgment. Arca CIO Jeff Dorman accused the move of blurring ethical lines, calling it “a failure of integrity.” Coinbase later clarified that Armstrong hadn’t participated in any markets and that the company’s internal rules strictly forbid employees from doing so.
Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin came to Armstrong’s defense, suggesting the CEO’s humor shouldn’t be taken too seriously. In any case, the financial stakes were minimal – total volume across the markets was under $100,000, with only a few hundred dollars tied to specific words.
The episode ended up boosting visibility for prediction platforms just as both Kalshi and Polymarket have been gaining traction and raising fresh funding. Meanwhile, Coinbase had a solid quarter, beating revenue expectations and closing the day up nearly 5% at $343.78 – ensuring the real winners were its shareholders, not the bettors.

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