Share this article
Singapore State Investment Fund Temasek Eliminates Position in Coinbase
The investment giant previously held about 8,168 shares in the U.S.-listed crypto exchange.
By Nelson Wang
Updated May 11, 2023, 7:12 p.m. Published Feb 14, 2022, 3:08 p.m.

Singapore’s state investment fund Temasek, one of the largest investors in the world, has sold off its modest position in crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN), according to its latest U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings.
- In its third quarter filing, the fund listed ownership of 8,168 Coinbase shares worth approximately $2.1 million, but its fourth quarter filing shows no Coinbase holdings. Temasek’s total portfolio was valued at $301 billion as of the end of 2021.
- Coinbase’s stock has declined about 40% since its initial public offering last April.
- Meanwhile, Temasek was one of the investors in FTX.US’ recent $400 million Series A funding round at an $8 billion valuation. It was not known how much Temasek had invested in FTX.US; other prominent investors in the round included Paradigm, SoftBank and Multicoin Capital.
- Temakske also eliminated its holdings in Uber (UBER) and Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) and added positions in trading platform Robinhood (HOOD), payments company Toast (TOST) and betting platform Draft Kings (DKNG)
Read more: Coinbase Forced Into Outage Following Super Bowl Ad After More Traffic 'Than Ever Encountered'
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters
UPDATE (Feb. 14, 19:22 UTC): Added additional position changes in last bullet. point.
Más para ti
Metaplanet operating profit to rise 81% in 2026 after soaring 17-fold last year on options writing

The company recorded a non-cash bitcoin valuation loss of 102.2 billion yen ($650 million) due to the cryptocurrency’s price drop.
Lo que debes saber:
- Metaplanet reported a 17-fold increase in operating profit to 6.28 billion yen ($40.8 million) and a 738% rise in revenue.
- Operating profit is forecast to rise 81% this year.
- The company recorded a non-cash bitcoin valuation loss of 102.2 billion yen ($650 million) due to the cryptocurrency’s price drop.
Top Stories










