Crypto companies are trying to prove they can survive the next downturn by becoming infrastructure businesses instead of pure Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) price bets.

Evolving Crypto Industry

In a CNBC documentary show, crypto reporter Tanaya Macheel said that after years of relying heavily on trading activity, firms including Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN), Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD), Circle (NYSE:CRCL), Bullish and Strategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) are pitching Wall Street on tokenization, stablecoin infrastructure, derivatives, blockchain rails and real-world assets.

The shift marks a major evolution for the crypto industry.

Instead of depending almost entirely on Bitcoin and altcoin price cycles, crypto firms want recurring revenue tied to financial infrastructure, settlement networks and tokenized assets.

The broader pitch is that crypto is becoming part of the real economy.

Coinbase reported $1.4 billion in Q1 2026 revenue but posted a $394 million net loss, highlighting how exposed its business remains to crypto trading volumes. The company’s answer is diversification.

It is expanding beyond spot crypto trading into derivatives, stock, multi asset trading and financial services infrastructure.

Tokenization, Operating System, Treasury Models

While Coinbase focuses on expanding trading products, firms like Bullish, Robinhood, Circle and Strategy are leaning into tokenization.

  • Bullish is betting on tokenization as the next major crypto growth narrative beyond trading and becoming a full-stack platform for tokenized financial markets.
  • Robinhood is pushing deeper into tokenization and blockchain-based financial infrastructure. It sees on-chain stocks and assets as a major long-term opportunity. It wants to position itself at the center of next-generation retail finance.
  • Circle reported strong Q1 growth as USDC circulation climbed to $77 billion. It launched ARC to expand into payments, settlement and tokenized asset infrastructure.
  • Strategy is positioning itself as an actively managed Bitcoin treasury company. The firm posted a $14.5 billion Q1 operating loss after BTC declined. Executives remain focused on increasing BTC-per-share exposure over time.

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