Coinbase and two executives have been hit with another proposed class-action lawsuit over the crypto exchange’s stock price drop after disclosing a user data breach earlier this month and for allegedly failing to disclose a violation of an agreement with a UK regulator.
Coinbase investor Brady Nessler
Coinbase said on May 15 that its damages bill could run up to $400 million after it was hit with a $20 million extortion attempt
Nessler claimed Coinbase (COIN) shares dropped by 7.2% to close at $244 on May 15 as a result of the disclosure. However, the stock did stage a comeback, spiking 9% and hitting $266 by the closing bell on May 16,
Coinbase stock closed down over 3% on Friday, May 23 at $263, falling another $1.62 after the bell. COIN is up nearly 6% so far this year.
Nessler’s complaint is seemingly the first to argue damages caused by Coinbase’s stock drop following its breach disclosure in a series of recent class-action lawsuits over the incident.
The crypto exchange was hit with
The FCA fined Coinbase’s UK arm $4.5 million in July 2024 for
The FCA said Coinbase onboarded 13,416 customers that the regulator considered high-risk and offered them
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Nessler said in the suit that the fine saw Coinbase’s stock fall by over 5%, closing at $231.52 on July 25, 2024.
Nessler also claimed that Coinbase didn’t disclose it had breached this agreement when the exchange first listed its shares
Nessler claims had she known about the agreement violation, she would not have purchased the stock at the “artificially inflated prices.”
Coinbase did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The class suit was filed on behalf of anyone who
Another lawsuit filed in Illinois on May 13, alleges Coinbase
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