Telegram's user base climbs to 950M, plans to launch app store

Telegram logo is seen displayed on a phone screen

Image Credits: Jakub Porzycki / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Messaging app Telegram has reached 950 million active users, and it aims to cross the 1 billion mark this year, the company’s founder Pavel Durov said on his channel on Monday.

The company is also planning to launch an app store and an in-app browser with support for web3 pages this month, Durov said last week.

In March, Telegram crossed 900 million users. At that time, in an interview with the Financial Times, Durov said that the company aims to be profitable next year.

Telegram seems to be accelerating adoption of web3 tech on its platform. The company has long supported cryptocurrency and blockchain initiatives, but its own efforts to enter the space slowed down after its initial coin offering failed in 2018. In December 2022, the company started auctioning usernames on the TON blockchain.

The company has since then focused on helping developers build mini-apps and games that use cryptocurrency for transactions. This year, it started sharing ad revenue with channel owners by handing out Toncoin (a token on the TON blockchain). Earlier this month, Telegram started letting channel owners convert stars to Toncoin to buy ads at discounted rates or trade cryptocurrencies.

However, Telegram has long suffered from scams and grifts. Since November 2023, scammers have been actively peddling different schemes to steal Toncoins from users, as per a report from Kaspersky. Durov addressed this issue in a message last week, saying that the company is working to mitigate such scams.

“Soon, Telegram will begin displaying the month of registration and principal country for public accounts (similar to Instagram). We will also allow organizations to use their mini apps to issue labels for channels, creating a decentralized marketplace for third-party verification,” he wrote in a message on his channel.

Crypto exchange Coinbase sues SEC over rulemaking petition

Coinbase cites stablecoins, Base as key 2024 priorities after crushing Q4 estimates

Crypto exchange Coinbase sues SEC over rulemaking petition

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After disclosing better-than-expected financial results in its fourth-quarter earnings report, U.S.-based Coinbase has big plans.

The second-largest crypto exchange told its investors that it intends to lean heavily on its work with the popular USDC stablecoin this year, lever its recently launched layer-2 blockchain Base as a way to experiment with and improve blockchain utility and promised to keep up its regulatory work on behalf of itself and the larger web3 industry. All while a bull market and institution inflows are coming back to play.

Coinbase’s strong fourth-quarter results come after a return to form for the crypto industry itself, which spent much of 2023 mired in a downturn. As last year came to a close, trading activity rose and the start of 2024 came with a critical regulatory win regarding spot bitcoin ETFs that could provide Coinbase and its peers with a strong start to the year.

Overall, total crypto market capitalization has increased 14% over a seven-day period to $1.96 trillion, the highest level since April 2022 before the Terra LUNA collapse. With the recent growth in the crypto market, many market players also expected Coinbase’s trade-based revenue to also rise — and it did.

In the fourth quarter, Coinbase generated $529.3 million worth of “transaction,” or trading, revenue, with $492.5 million coming from retail activity and $36.7 million from institutional traders. The total figure was up 83.4% from $288.6 million in the third quarter.

Even though it’s looking bright, the exchange’s total trading revenue is still down 44% year-over-year as the market climbs its way back up to bull market levels.

Financial results

In Q4 2023 Coinbase generated revenue of $953.8 million, far surpassing the $629.1 million generated in Q4 2022. It also handily topped the $674.1 million in revenue it posted in the third quarter of last year. The company’s reported figures trounced expectations, which included revenue just north of $820 million.

Earnings came in at $1.04 per share on $275.7 million in net income, well ahead of expectations of $0.02 per share.

Tailwinds

Coinbase could surpass its strong Q4 results in the first quarter of 2024, a period that included regulatory wins, including the approval and launch of a host of spot bitcoin ETFs that lean on the company to custody their digital assets. (As they accrete more AUM, Coinbase’s custody business should expand linearly with those inflows.)

But Coinbase is also the custodian for eight of the 11 spot bitcoin ETF issuers, meaning it’s also finding cash flowing from that avenue. And the more the spot bitcoin ETF market grows, the more chance Coinbase has to earn. (The company is bullish on the matter, calling the SEC’s approval of spot bitcoin ETFs “a watershed moment for the expansion of the cryptoeconomy.”)

Through February 13th, its earnings document notes that the company recorded “approximately $320 million” worth of transaction revenue, putting it on pace for a roughly $640 million to $650 million pace for the quarter. With subscription and services revenue estimated “within a range of $410-480 million” for the current quarter, Coinbase could surpass $1 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time in many quarters.

With more demand for its custody product in the offing, trading fees climbing and crypto prices regaining much of their prior vigor, Coinbase is on far stronger footing than it was a year ago. At the same time, there are some potential headwinds on the horizon for the company. Coinbase, like many fintech players, has benefited greatly from a rise in interest rates, which bolstered the value of reserves held by USDC, and the income provided by its own cash reserves. Interest rates in Coinbase’s domestic market are expected to moderate this year, which could limit growth in interest-based incomes at the company. There’s also a chance that some consumers will turn to ETF products instead of purchasing bitcoin through Coinbase directly, which could lead to some unevenness in its trading incomes.

Still, Coinbase set out to generate positive adjusted EBITDA even during a lengthy market downturn. It did that, and is now heading back into growth territory as a slimmed company. That’s hardly a bad place to start the year, and provides a bit of warmth for an industry that just mired through an extended winter.