Written by: Nishil Jain
Compiled by: Luffy, Foresight News
Last week, Coinbase launched a new product touted as the "Future of Finance." A single app now offers five major functions: 24/5 stock trading, centralized exchange and on-chain cryptocurrency trading, futures and perpetual contract trading, prediction markets, and is even equipped with an AI financial analyst. All functions are accessible via mobile, and a user's single account balance can be instantly switched between different asset classes for use.
Not long ago, Robinhood had already made a preemptive move: launching tokenized stock trading in Europe, 24/5 futures trading, cryptocurrency interest-earning services, and plans to launch the social trading feature Robinhood Social in 2026.
The mainstream discourse on platform X interprets this trend as the evolution of "super apps," but a key point is being overlooked: this is far from a simple stacking of functions; it's breaking down the boundaries between financial asset categories that were created due to regulatory and technological limitations.
Why, after a decade of fragmented development, are financial applications now experiencing a wave of consolidation? What does this mean for the users and platforms involved? Let's now delve into the main topic.
The Pain Points of Fragmentation
Over the past decade, numerous fintech applications have emerged, yet most only cover a single aspect of financial services, with functions like stock trading, cryptocurrency, payments, and savings scattered across different apps.
While this model provided users with more choices and allowed companies to focus on refining single solutions, it proved problematic in practice.
Want to sell stocks and buy cryptocurrency? The stock trade needs to be executed on Monday, with T+1 settlement not completing until Tuesday; then initiating a withdrawal takes 2-3 days for the funds to reach your bank account; transferring the funds to Coinbase then takes another 1-2 days. From "deciding to reallocate funds" to "funds actually being available," the entire process takes about 5 days. And during those 5 days, the investment opportunity you originally spotted has likely vanished, while your capital sits idle in a cumbersome process.
For example, you might want to buy Bitcoin at $86,000 on December 18th, but end up buying it 5 days later at $90,000 due to process delays. For more volatile investment opportunities like meme coins, Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), or Initial Public Offerings (IPOs), the losses from such delays can be even more severe.
The problem of fragmentation isn't limited to a single region. An Indian investor wanting to buy NVIDIA stock would need to complete KYC verification multiple times, open an account with a broker that supports Indian users investing in US stocks, and deposit additional funds, all just to buy this one stock.
We've all felt this operational friction, but it's only recently that the infrastructure capable of solving this problem has begun to take shape.
The Cornerstones of Change: Infrastructure Matures
Three structural changes have made the birth of integrated financial platforms possible.
Tokenization Breaks Time Barriers
Traditional stocks can only be traded during New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) hours (9:30 AM to 4:00 PM ET, 5 days a week), while cryptocurrencies enable 24/7 trading. By achieving stock tokenization on Layer 2 networks, it has been proven that, with the right technical mechanisms, stocks can theoretically be traded around the clock.
Today, Robinhood's tokenized stocks launched in Europe support 24/5 trading, and Coinbase is set to follow this model.
Regulatory Frameworks Become Clearer
In recent years, Bitcoin spot ETFs have successfully launched, stablecoin legalization has progressed, tokenization regulatory frameworks have entered deliberation stages, and prediction markets have gained approval from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). Although the regulatory environment isn't perfect, it is clear enough for platforms to confidently develop multi-asset products without fear of being completely shut down.
Mobile Wallet Infrastructure Matures
Embedded wallets can now seamlessly handle complex cross-chain operations. Privy, acquired by Stripe, allows users to create a wallet using an existing email address without touching seed phrases; the recently launched crypto trading app Fomo enables non-crypto users to trade tokens on Ethereum, Solana, Base, Arbitrum, and other chains without manually selecting networks, and supports Apple Pay deposits. The backend automatically handles all complex processes—the user simply clicks "Buy Token" to complete the operation.
The Core Logic of Liquidity Integration
The core driver behind this change is: funds scattered across different applications are essentially idle capital.
In an integrated model, a user only needs to maintain one account balance: after selling stocks, the funds can be instantly used to buy cryptocurrency, eliminating the wait for settlement windows, withdrawal review periods, and intermediaries like banks. The 5-day opportunity cost vanishes entirely.
Platforms that integrate liquidity are more efficient. With deeper liquidity pools, they can offer better execution speeds; since all trading pairs share the same underlying liquidity, they can support more pairs; they can provide yield on idle capital, much like banks; furthermore, reduced friction leads to increased user trading volume, generating more fee income for them.
Coinbase's Integration Blueprint
Coinbase is the most typical case study in this wave of financial integration. The company was founded in 2012, starting as a simple cryptocurrency exchange supporting only Bitcoin and Ethereum buying and selling. In the following years, Coinbase gradually added institutional custody, staking services, and cryptocurrency lending/interest-earning products, evolving into a full-service crypto platform by 2021.
Its expansion didn't stop there: it launched the Coinbase Card for crypto spending, the Coinbase Commerce payment solution for merchants, and built its own Layer 2 blockchain, Base.
The new product launch on December 17th marked the full realization of Coinbase's "super app" vision. Today, Coinbase supports 24/5 stock trading, plans to launch Coinbase Tokenize—a tokenization service for real-world assets for institutions—early next year, has integrated prediction markets through a partnership with Kalshi, launched futures and perpetual contract trading, and integrated Solana ecosystem decentralized exchange (DEX) trading functionality within the app. Additionally, the Base app has expanded to 140 countries and enhanced the social trading experience.
Coinbase is gradually becoming the operating system for on-chain finance. Through a single interface and a single account balance, it covers trading needs for all asset classes, aiming to allow users to complete all financial operations without leaving the platform.
Robinhood is following a similar development path: starting with commission-free stock trading, gradually adding cryptocurrency trading, a Gold subscription service offering 3% cashback and 3.5% deposit interest, futures trading, and subsequently launching tokenized stocks in Europe.
Both platforms are betting on the same core logic: users don't want to download different apps for stocks, crypto, and derivatives; they need a single account balance, a unified interface, and the ability to instantly reallocate funds.
Social Trading: An Emerging Differentiator
Asset integration solves the liquidity problem, but it doesn't solve the user's asset discovery challenge.
When there are millions of assets available in the market, how should users filter potential trades? How should they build their investment portfolio?
This is where social features add value. Coinbase's Base app includes a dynamic feed where users can see others' buy actions; Robinhood plans to launch Robinhood Social in 2026; eToro has offered social trading since 2007, paying copy traders a 1.5% commission on the assets they hold.
A wave of apps exploring social trading features has also emerged in the on-chain space, such as Fomo, 0xPPL, and Farcaster. These apps allow users to see what their friends are investing in, follow them, and copy their trades.
Fomo's leaderboard page
Social trading allows users to see others' trading behavior in real-time and copy it with one click. This significantly reduces decision-making friction: no need for independent research, just follow trusted trading strategies. Once a platform forms a stable community ecosystem—where users follow trading influencers and build personal reputations—it becomes very difficult for users to migrate to other platforms, creating a strong competitive moat and user stickiness for the trading app.
Centralized exchanges have offered copy trading since 2022, but usage rates have consistently remained below 2%. Mobile app platforms are betting that optimizing the user experience will increase the adoption of this feature. Whether their judgment is correct will determine if social trading becomes a true differentiator or just another commonplace feature.
A Pessimistic View: Potential Risks and Controversies
Let's be frank about the current state: the original intention of cryptocurrency was to achieve financial decentralization, remove intermediaries, and let users control their own assets.
And now, we are rebuilding centralized platforms: Coinbase controls asset custody, trade execution, and social graphs; Robinhood holds the private keys for embedded wallets; users need to trust the platform's solvency, security, and ongoing operational capability. All of this carries underlying counterparty risk.
Robinhood's tokenized stocks are essentially derivatives that track stock prices, not actual shares. If the platform collapses, what users hold is merely an IOU.
The problems caused by gamification are also becoming more severe: 24/7 trading means you might make impulsive trades at 3 AM; social feeds can induce FOMO when you see others profiting; push notifications alert you to every market swing in real-time. This is essentially scaled-up casino psychology, meticulously optimized by designers who understand how to trigger dopamine responses.
Is this progress in financial democratization, or just a repackaged system of exploitation? This is a philosophical question worth pondering.
The Essence Behind the Phenomenon
We spent a decade unbundling financial services, operating under the assumption that fragmentation would foster competition and bring more choice.
But it turned out that fragmentation also caused inefficiency: idle funds, dispersed liquidity, and users forced to hold more idle capital due to cumbersome fund transfer processes. The new era is changing this reality.
Coinbase and Robinhood are gradually becoming the new banks: they hold your salary, savings, investments, and spending patterns; they control trade execution, asset custody, and access; they intermediate every transaction. The only difference compared to traditional banks is: a prettier interface, 24/7 trading markets, and deposit rates 50 basis points higher.
Whether we are achieving financial democratization by lowering barriers and increasing efficiency, or merely changing the gatekeepers while keeping the barriers themselves, the era of fragmentation is over. In the coming years, we will witness whether financial integration based on open underlying technology can deliver better outcomes than the traditional banks we fled from, or if it just changes the logo that locks users in.


