TLDR Coinbase CLO Paul Grewal sold 1,314 COIN stock on Feb. 27, worth approximately $233,000 The sale was disclosed via a Form 4 SEC filing A shareholder lawsuitTLDR Coinbase CLO Paul Grewal sold 1,314 COIN stock on Feb. 27, worth approximately $233,000 The sale was disclosed via a Form 4 SEC filing A shareholder lawsuit

Coinbase (COIN) Stock: CLO Sells $233K Days Before Lawsuit Names Him as Defendant

2026/03/06 19:58
3 min read
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TLDR

  • Coinbase CLO Paul Grewal sold 1,314 COIN stock on Feb. 27, worth approximately $233,000
  • The sale was disclosed via a Form 4 SEC filing
  • A shareholder lawsuit was filed March 3 against Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and other top executives
  • The suit alleges misleading statements between April 2021 and June 2023 led to regulatory penalties
  • Coinbase previously paid $100M to NY DFS and $5M to New Jersey over compliance failures

Coinbase’s chief legal officer Paul Grewal sold 1,314 COIN on Feb. 27, according to a Form 4 filing with the SEC. The sale totalled approximately $233,000.


COIN Stock Card
Coinbase Global, Inc., COIN

The disclosure came on the last trading day of February and follows standard reporting requirements for corporate insiders.

Insider selling doesn’t automatically signal bad news. Executives often sell for personal financial planning, tax purposes, or portfolio diversification.

Still, the timing raised eyebrows — just days later, a Coinbase shareholder filed a derivative lawsuit against several of the company’s top executives.

Kevin Meehan filed the suit on March 3 in the U.S. District Court for New Jersey on behalf of Coinbase. The defendants include CEO Brian Armstrong, co-founder Fred Ehrsam, CLO Paul Grewal, and CFO Alesia Haas.

The lawsuit alleges that executives made false or misleading statements between April 2021 and June 2023. Those statements, the suit claims, exposed Coinbase to regulatory enforcement.

Past Regulatory Penalties

The legal action points to two specific enforcement outcomes. In early 2023, Coinbase settled with the New York State Department of Financial Services for $100 million over failures in its anti-money laundering program.

Around the same time, Coinbase was fined $5 million by the New Jersey Bureau of Securities for listing unregistered securities.

The lawsuit seeks damages on Coinbase’s behalf, reforms to the company’s compliance structure, and the return of compensation received by insiders during the period in question.

What the Lawsuit Is Asking For

Derivative lawsuits are filed by shareholders on behalf of the company itself, not for personal gain. Any recovery would go back to Coinbase rather than the individual plaintiff.

The suit targets the board’s alleged failure to properly oversee compliance and disclosure obligations during a critical growth period for the company.

Grewal’s name appears both in the stock sale filing and as a named defendant in the lawsuit, though there is no stated connection between the two events.

Coinbase went public in April 2021 — the start of the period cited in the lawsuit — and has faced continued regulatory scrutiny since.

The company launched stock trading for users earlier this year, expanding its product lineup beyond crypto.

COIN was trading at approximately $177 at the time of Grewal’s Feb. 27 sale, based on the disclosed transaction value.

No court dates have been set in the New Jersey lawsuit, and Coinbase has not yet publicly responded to the litigation.

The post Coinbase (COIN) Stock: CLO Sells $233K Days Before Lawsuit Names Him as Defendant appeared first on CoinCentral.

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