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GameStop says Bitcoin position remains in place under Coinbase deal

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GameStop says Bitcoin position remains in place under Coinbase deal

GameStop said it did not sell the 4,709 Bitcoin tied to its January balance sheet change. 

Summary

  • GameStop pledged 4,709 BTC with Coinbase Credit and kept economic exposure instead of selling outright.
  • The covered-call strategy generated premium income but capped upside if Bitcoin rises above strike prices.
  • GameStop reclassified the pledged Bitcoin and recorded digital asset receivables on its balance sheet.

Instead, the company used the holdings in a covered-call arrangement with Coinbase Credit, according to its latest annual filing.

GameStop’s latest 10-K filing showed that the company still kept exposure to the Bitcoin it bought in 2025. The filing said the retailer pledged 4,709 BTC as collateral with Coinbase Credit instead of selling the assets outright.

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That disclosure addressed earlier market speculation that GameStop had exited the position in January. The value of the pledged Bitcoin was about $324 million at the time, based on market pricing referenced in the report.

The filing said GameStop entered an agreement with Coinbase Credit during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025. Under that arrangement, the company sold covered call options on part of the Bitcoin it owned. GameStop said, 

“In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, we entered into an agreement with Coinbase Credit, Inc., under which we sold covered call options on a portion of the bitcoin we own.” 

The strategy allows the company to collect premium income while keeping overall exposure to Bitcoin price moves.

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The strike prices on the options ranged from $105,000 to $110,000. That means the company would limit its upside if Bitcoin rises above those levels, but it would still earn income from the options premiums.

The agreement is set to expire on Friday, according to the filing. As of Jan. 31, the call option contracts created a $700,000 liability and an unrealized gain of about $2.3 million.

Coinbase control changed accounting treatment

GameStop also said Coinbase Credit had the right to “rehypothecate, commingle, or unilaterally sell” the pledged Bitcoin. Because of that, the company said control of the assets had moved to the counterparty under the agreement.

The filing stated,

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“Accordingly, we derecognized the Pledged Bitcoin as an intangible asset and recognized digital assets receivable of $368.3 million within ‘Digital assets and related receivables’ on our Consolidated Balance Sheets as of January 31, 2026.” 

The company added that its economic exposure remained consistent with direct Bitcoin ownership.

GameStop also reported an unrealized loss of $59.7 million tied to digital asset receivables during fiscal 2025. The filing added that some of the covered-call contracts expired unexercised after the fiscal year ended on Jan. 31.

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Crypto World

Coinbase Users Push Back against Prediction Markets Notifications

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Coinbase, Cryptocurrency Exchange, Sport, Prediction Markets

Negative reactions to cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase using its notifications to push bets on event contracts amid the March Madness basketball tournament range from “annoying” to “absurd.”

In January, Coinbase rolled out prediction market bets for US-based users as part of a partnership with Kalshi. However, for some users, the last two months have been seen as an opportunity for the exchange to get people “hooked on sports gambling” using an app that many had devoted to crypto trading.

“I have received three separate notifications about College Basketball from Coinbase in the past *hour* alone,” said X user AvgJoesCrypto on Thursday. “It is absurd that, amidst arguably the worst collapse in trust in this industry’s history, the largest American CEX has completely pivoted to trying to get their customer base hooked on sports gambling, so that they can extract even more exorbitant fees.”

Coinbase, Cryptocurrency Exchange, Sport, Prediction Markets
Source: Ariel Givner

Like sports event contract betting on platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, Coinbase Prediction Markets offers US-based users the chance to bet on the outcomes of a variety of events.

Prediction market platforms already face several lawsuits filed by state-level authorities, even as the federal regulator, the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), pushes for “exclusive jurisdiction” over the market.

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John Palmer, co-founder of PartyDAO, expressed a similar sentiment over the Coinbase notifications, pushing bets on March Madness games:

“This is essentially encouraging me to gamble. What does that say about the internal philosophy around money management? Can I trust the yield sources on USDC interest, can I trust internal risk management, etc.”

In December, before the launch of its prediction market service, Coinbase filed lawsuits against regulators in Connecticut, Illinois and Michigan. The exchange argued, likely in anticipation of its prediction market launch, that the CFTC, not state-level gambling authorities, should regulate the platform.

Cointelegraph contacted Coinbase for comment on the user complaints, but had not received a response at the time of publication.

Related: Coinbase launches token-backed down payments for Fannie Mae loans

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Congress seeks to ban politicians from using prediction markets amid insider information allegations

Amid user feedback and state-level lawsuits, many US lawmakers have also been calling for legislation to address issues in prediction markets. Allegations of someone in government using Polymarket to profit from a bet on the removal of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro have led to bills seeking to ban any US President or member of Congress from using the platforms.

Both Kalshi and Polymarket have introduced separate policies to curb insider trading. Kalshi said it would ban political candidates from trading on event contracts related to their campaigns, and Polymarket introduced measures to limit easily manipulated or ethically sensitive markets.

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