- Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has highlighted a strategic opportunity to broaden investor participation by revisiting U.S. accredited investor regulations.
- His stance is linked to the company’s recent partnership with Apollo Global Management, a specialist in tokenizing real‑world assets such as private equity.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong recently discussed the limitations imposed by the United States’ accredited investor laws. While he did not explicitly mention real‑world asset tokenization, the implications are clear for tokenized private equity investments.
Armstrong Calls for Reform of Accredited Investor Regulations
On Tuesday, Armstrong tweeted a plea for lawmakers to reassess the current accredited investor framework. He argued that many companies are extending their private phases, thereby restricting participation to a narrow group of wealthy individuals.
Armstrong noted that retail investors typically only gain access to such opportunities after an IPO, by which time much of the upside has already been captured by private investors.
While acknowledging the intended protective purpose of accredited investor rules, he contended that they effectively function as a regressive tax, limiting economic mobility for a broader segment of the population.
He proposed either requiring a financial literacy assessment for investors or eliminating the restrictions altogether, emphasizing the importance of transparency and robust fraud controls in any investment platform.
I think it’s time to revisit the accredited investor laws in the US.
Companies are staying private longer, where only accredited investors (aka rich people!) can invest. Retail investors can only come in after IPO, when much of the upside has already been captured.
These rules…
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) June 16, 2026
Implications for Coinbase’s Real‑World Asset Strategy
Tokenized private equity and venture capital assets represent one of the fastest‑growing segments within real‑world asset tokenization, expanding from a modest $27,442 niche in 2018 to a $1.96 billion market today.
Armstrong’s call, while not explicitly referencing tokenized assets, clearly aligns with Coinbase’s strategic objectives. Easing accredited investor restrictions would reduce regulatory hurdles for private equity tokens and support the company’s broader vision of hosting production‑grade alternative assets.
In October 2025, Coinbase Asset Management partnered with Apollo Global Management to bridge private credit, stablecoin, and tokenization ecosystems. Armstrong’s advocacy directly supports this partnership’s potential to unlock new investment opportunities.
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