0%

FACT CHECK: Coinbase executive share sales

28. Apr. 2021 3 Min. gelesen
News Artikel Banner Bild

Over the weekend of April 17-18, 2021, we saw numerous pieces of misinformation spread about our investor and executive stock sales. We’d like to set the record straight.

When investors or executives sell their shares on a listing day — or at any other time — they file a Form 4 with the SEC. These filings are public and available to anyone. Unfortunately, they can be tricky to correctly interpret. Which is what may have led to misinformation being shared on Twitter.

It started with someone creating an erroneous chart:

This led to a false narrative that Coinbase executives were selling the majority of their stock when we listed on Nasdaq, which continued to spread on Twitter:

Here’s the truth:

  • Brian Armstrong, CEO, sold <2% of his total outstanding equity, not 71%

  • Alesia Haas, CFO, sold 15% of her total outstanding equity, not 100% as quoted in some reports

  • Emilie Choi, President and COO, sold 24% of her total outstanding equity

  • Surojit Chatterjee, Chief Product Officer, sold 8% of his total outstanding equity

  • Jennifer Jones, Chief Accounting Officer, sold 38% of total outstanding equity

  • Other execs’ selling percentages are accurately reflected in this piece and the Coinbase filings are listed on our investor site here

These percentages are consistent with executive stock sales in other recent Direct Listings*.

How did this misinformation happen? We’re not sure, but perhaps it’s confusion with the different types of equity that exist and how they’re reported. Class A and Class B shares, options, and RSUs are accounted for differently in different reports. In addition, if an executive did a same day exercise and sale, it looked as though they sold 100% of their shares as opposed to 100% of the shares exercised on the day.

The misinformation continued:

Again, false and harmful. In direct listings, there are no new shares offered. Existing shareholders need to sell portions of their total holdings to create a market, particularly in the first days of trading (as was the case here). This is different from IPOs (Initial Public Offerings) where new shares are offered as part of the listing so investors and executives are not relied upon to sell any shares to create supply for new investors.

Our Chief Legal Officer, Paul Grewal, explains:

Summary

Coinbase executives and early investors sold portions of their total holdings to create liquidity on the opening day of trading for Coinbase stock. These sales are critical to a direct listing. Despite misguided commentary on social media and in some news outlets, these sales represented small percentages of their overall holdings. Our executives and investors may continue to sell their holdings — or buy additional stock — at various points in the future. These transactions will always be publicly visible via SEC disclosures.

*Based on a review public disclosures of executive sales following the direct listings of Asana, Palantir, Roblox and Slack. Asana’s executive officers sold 1.67%; Palantir’s executive officers sold 7.29%; Roblox executive officers sold 4.21%; and Slack executives sold 4.18% of total executive officer holdings. Coinbase Section 16 officers sold 3.32% of total Section 16 officer holdings.

was originally published in The Coinbase Blog on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Populäre Nachrichten

How to Set Up and Use Trust Wallet for Binance Smart Chain
#Bitcoin#Bitcoins#Config+2 weitere Tags

How to Set Up and Use Trust Wallet for Binance Smart Chain

Your Essential Guide To Binance Leveraged Tokens

Your Essential Guide To Binance Leveraged Tokens

How to Sell Your Bitcoin Into Cash on Binance (2021 Update)
#Subscriptions

How to Sell Your Bitcoin Into Cash on Binance (2021 Update)

What is Grid Trading? (A Crypto-Futures Guide)

What is Grid Trading? (A Crypto-Futures Guide)

Beginne kostenlos mit dem Handel auf Cryptohopper!

Kostenlose Nutzung - keine Kreditkarte erforderlich

Los geht's
Cryptohopper appCryptohopper app

Haftungsausschluss: Cryptohopper ist keine regulierte Einheit. Der Handel mit Kryptowährungs-Bots birgt erhebliche Risiken, und vergangene Ergebnisse sind kein Indikator für zukünftige Ergebnisse. Die in den Produkt-Screenshots gezeigten Gewinne dienen nur zu illustrativen Zwecken und können übertrieben sein. Engagiere dich nur im Bot-Handel, wenn du über ausreichendes Wissen verfügst oder Beratung von einem qualifizierten Finanzberater einholst. Cryptohopper übernimmt unter keinen Umständen Haftung für (a) jeglichen Verlust oder Schaden, ganz oder teilweise, der durch Transaktionen mit unserer Software verursacht wird, oder in Zusammenhang damit entsteht, oder (b) jegliche direkte, indirekte, besondere, Folge- oder zufällige Schäden. Bitte beachte, dass der Inhalt, der auf der Cryptohopper Social-Trading-Plattform verfügbar ist, von Mitgliedern der Cryptohopper-Community generiert wird und keine Ratschläge oder Empfehlungen von Cryptohopper oder in seinem Namen darstellt. Gewinne, die auf dem Marketplace gezeigt werden, sind keine Indikatoren für zukünftige Ergebnisse. Durch die Nutzung der Dienste von Cryptohopper erkennst du die inhärenten Risiken des Kryptowährungshandels an und stimmst zu, Cryptohopper von jeglichen Haftungsansprüchen oder Verlusten freizustellen. Es ist wichtig, unsere Nutzungsbedingungen und unsere Risikohinweise zu überprüfen und zu verstehen, bevor du unsere Software verwendest oder an Handelsaktivitäten teilnimmst. Bitte konsultiere rechtliche und finanzielle Fachleute für personalisierte Ratschläge, die auf deine spezifischen Umstände zugeschnitten sind.

©2017 - 2024 Copyright by Cryptohopper™ - Alle Rechte vorbehalten.