Citi, the financial services multinational, has initiated coverage of United States crypto exchange Coinbase’s stock (COIN) this week with a very bullish price target.
It has been reported that Citi analyst Peter Christiansen told investors they could “buy crypto’s general store” in a research note. Citi has given COIN a bullish price target of $415, which is substantially higher than Monday’s closing price of $319.
However, the analyst stated that the stock offers investors “direct exposure to increased retail and institutional adoption of cryptocurrencies.” The multinational banking giant sees the potential in Coinbase as the company makes continued efforts to expand its operations beyond just a crypto exchange and into other areas such as nonfungible tokens (NFT) and cold wallet storage.
The report said that the company accrued more than 1 million applications for its NFT platform waiting list within a day or so of its announcement on October 13. Christiansen recommended the company “for its position within the crypto value chain, a networking-based business model and strategy, the undeniably very large opportunity set… yes, we believe COIN is investable.”
Likewise, he also considers Coinbase’s “lean forward approach to regulatory compliance” a competitive advantage.
He added:
“To a degree, we think rising regulations could be a positive for Coinbase’s competitive positioning, particularly versus business models that predominantly rely on markets being unregulated.”
He further said that the stock is in place to make “higher highs and higher lows” as crypto-asset adoption increases. US investment bank Piper Sandler also raised its target price for the stock to $360. Not every analyst is on board, with JPMorgan’s Kenneth Worthington raising his price target on COIN only slightly to $375 from $372. However, Lisa Ellis, senior equity analyst at MoffettNathanson, said COIN was a “must-own stock” that could go to $600 in light of its recent partnership with Facebook on its Novi crypto wallet.
Moreover, Coinbase went public in April with an opening initial public offering price of $381, surging to a peak of $430 on the day before retreating. COIN hit a monthly high of $326 last week but has fallen 4.3% since to an after-hours trading price of $312. Shortly after it was listed, reports emerged that Coinbase insiders and executives had begun dumping the stock.
The company made around $1.6 billion in profits in Q2, a large portion of which had come from its higher-than-industry average transaction fees. The Q3 report comes out on November 9.
Thus, in August, CNBC Mad Money host Jim Cramer recommended Coinbase stock, suggesting investors allocate 5% of their portfolios to crypto assets.
Source: Cointelegraph
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