Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s Wild 2012 Pitch Resurfaces

A video has surfaced showing Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong rehearsing a pitch in 2012, years before the company became the largest Bitcoin exchange in the U.S.

In the recording, Armstrong lays out a simple argument: Bitcoin is a digital currency that can move money instantly anywhere in the world. But it’s hard to use. Tools were clunky, backups were tricky, and users could easily lose their funds. 

Coinbase, he said, would fix that. The platform would act as a hosted wallet, letting anyone access their money from any device without worrying about security or backups.

Armstrong compares his plan to what iTunes did for music. He emphasizes the early growth: sign-ups and transactions increasing “20 % a day,” and $65,000 in Bitcoin payments were processed in just five weeks.

The pitch is short, under three minutes, and candid. Armstrong discussed fees, competition, and the potential of Bitcoin as a global payment system. It’s a glimpse at the early vision of a company few outside crypto had heard of.