Why Did ARK Sell Coinbase Shares?
Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest continued trimming its exposure to Coinbase on Friday, selling roughly $22 million worth of shares across three exchange-traded funds. Trade disclosures show ARK offloaded Coinbase stock from its Innovation ETF, Next Generation Internet ETF, and Fintech Innovation ETF, bringing total sales to more than 134,000 shares.
The move followed another Coinbase sale a day earlier, when ARK sold about $17.4 million worth of shares. That transaction marked the firm’s first reduction in Coinbase holdings in 2026 and the first sale since August 2025, reversing a brief return to buying earlier in the week.
The timing stands out given that Coinbase shares rose sharply during Friday’s session, ending the day up around 13%. Despite the rally, the stock remains down roughly 26% year-to-date, reflecting weaker trading activity and pressure on centralized exchanges.
Investor Takeaway
What Is Driving the Shift Toward Bullish?
While cutting back on Coinbase, ARK added to its stake in digital asset platform Bullish. The firm bought more than 393,000 shares across the same three ETFs, spending about $10.7 million in total.
Bullish shares also rose on Friday, gaining about 10% to trade near $27. Even so, the stock is down roughly 27% this year after the company reported a steep fourth-quarter loss. Bullish posted a net loss of $563.6 million for the quarter, reversing a profit recorded in the same period a year earlier.
The contrasting trades point to a rebalancing within ARK’s crypto exposure. Rather than exiting the sector outright, the firm appears to be reallocating capital between listed digital-asset businesses with different revenue profiles and risk drivers.
How Do Broader Portfolio Moves Fit In?
The crypto-related trades came alongside adjustments elsewhere in ARK’s portfolios. The firm increased holdings in companies such as Alphabet, Recursion Pharmaceuticals, and Tempus AI, while reducing positions in several growth-oriented technology names, including Roku, The Trade Desk, and PagerDuty.
These changes reflect ongoing portfolio turnover across ARK’s thematic funds, where allocations can shift quickly as price action and earnings reports alter short-term risk and return expectations. In that context, crypto equities remain part of a broader basket rather than a standalone bet.
The moves also follow a difficult period for ARK’s flagship ETFs, which have struggled alongside declines in digital asset markets and high-growth stocks more broadly.
Investor Takeaway
How Has the Crypto Downturn Affected ARK ETFs?
A pullback in crypto markets during the fourth quarter weighed heavily on several ARK funds. In its latest quarterly report, the firm pointed to weakness in digital-asset-related companies as a key drag on performance, with Coinbase cited as a major contributor to losses in ARKK, ARKW, and ARKF.
Coinbase shares fell more sharply than major cryptocurrencies over the period as trading volumes on centralized exchanges declined following October’s liquidation event. From October through year-end, the stock dropped nearly 35%, lagging moves in Bitcoin and other large tokens.
That divergence highlights a growing gap between crypto prices and the listed companies tied to trading activity. For fund managers, it has complicated decisions about how closely crypto equities still track the underlying asset class.
As digital asset markets search for steadier footing, ARK’s latest trades underline a cautious approach: reducing exposure where earnings remain under strain, while keeping a foothold in platforms seen as longer-term plays on crypto market infrastructure.

