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06/16 19:20

Mark Cuban has a one-word response to Coinbase CEO

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After Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong called for a rethink of accredited investor laws in the United States, Billionaire investor Mark Cuban replied on June 16 with a blunt line on X:

  “Just sell em MemeCoins Brian!”

Just sell em MemeCoins Brian ! https://t.co/UQ1okibd6i

— Mark Cuban (@mcuban) June 16, 2026

It was short, sarcastic, and very Cuban. 

But behind the joke sits a serious criticism of how American markets treat retail investors. On X, formerly known as Twitter, Armstrong argued that the current rules keep ordinary investors away from some of the most attractive early-stage opportunities, while wealthy investors continue to get access before everyone else.

A system built around wealth, not knowledge

His main point was simple. Many companies now stay private for much longer than they used to. By the time a company finally goes public, a large part of the upside may already have been captured by venture capital firms, private funds, and accredited investors. 

Retail investors are then left to buy after the IPO, often at a much later and more expensive stage.

Armstrong said the rules were originally designed with good intentions. They were meant to protect regular people from scams, excessive risk, and deals they might not fully understand. 

But, in his view, the outcome has become unfair. Instead of protecting people, the rules may now be protecting access for those who are already wealthy.

Under the current accredited investor framework, access is largely tied to income, net worth, or professional status. Armstrong criticized that approach, saying it effectively creates a system where being rich gives someone the right to take financial risks, while everyone else is treated as if they cannot make their own decisions.

He described the situation as regressive. In other words, a rule that was created to protect people may now be limiting their ability to build wealth.

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Armstrong proposes two ways forward

Armstrong floated two possible alternatives. The first would be to replace the current wealth-based standard with a financial literacy test. If someone can prove they understand risk, private markets, and investment basics, they should be allowed to participate.

The second option would go even further. Armstrong said the rule could be removed entirely, allowing consenting adults to assess their own risk. Disclosure requirements would remain in place, and fraud would still be punished. But access would no longer depend mainly on whether someone is already wealthy.

That argument is not new in Silicon Valley or crypto circles. Founders, venture investors, and some retail market advocates have made similar points for years. 

What makes Armstrong’s post notable is that it comes from the CEO of Coinbase, a company built around the idea that more people should have direct access to financial markets.

Related: S&P 500-listed CEO Brian Armstrong warns of looming U.S. debt crisis

Cuban highlights a contradiction in retail investing

Cuban’s response landed because it exposed an uncomfortable contradiction.

Retail investors may be blocked from investing in private companies before an IPO. But they can still buy meme coins, micro-cap tokens, leveraged products, and other highly speculative assets with very few barriers. In crypto especially, the riskiest products are often the easiest to access.

That seems to be the point Cuban was making. If regulators are trying to protect ordinary investors from risky private deals, why are those same investors allowed to pour money into meme coins that can rise or collapse in hours?

The comment was not really about meme coins alone. It was about inconsistency.

What gives the jab its edge is Cuban's own complicated history with crypto. He was once one of its most visible cheerleaders, aggressively endorsing Bitcoin as a hedge against inflation, championing Dogecoin, and even leading the Dallas Mavericks to become one of the first major NBA teams to accept DOGE as payment for tickets and merchandise. He also invested in nearly two dozen blockchain companies.

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But the conviction didn't hold. Cuban sold most of his Bitcoin holdings in May 2026 after it failed to behave as the inflation shield he expected. He has since described the crypto space broadly as "disappointing," and called meme coins "garbage."  

That history matters here. When Cuban mocks Armstrong by telling him to just sell people meme coins, it is not coming from someone on the outside looking in. It is coming from someone who bought into the promise of crypto, watched parts of it fall short, and now views the meme coin corner of the market with open contempt.

Meme coins have become a symbol of retail speculation in crypto. Some traders have made large gains, but many others have lost money chasing hype, viral narratives, and tokens with little or no underlying business model. Compared with that, investing in a private company may not automatically be safer, but the current rules treat the two worlds very differently.

Armstrong’s position is that access should be fairer. Cuban’s reply suggests the current system is already full of contradictions.

Related: Mark Cuban backs a crypto idea many once hated
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