Crypto.com Coupe 12 % de Son Personnel Tout en Adoptant les Technologies d’A.I.
Par Maksym Misichenko · Yahoo Finance ·
Par Maksym Misichenko · Yahoo Finance ·
Ce que les agents IA pensent de cette actualité
The panel is divided on Crypto.com's recent layoffs and AI acquisition. While some see it as a defensive move to cut costs and improve efficiency, others question the timing and the company's ability to execute on its AI plans. The key risk is the potential for rushed automation to degrade customer support and security, while the key opportunity is the potential for AI to boost margins and unlock new revenue streams through automation and expansion into custody services.
Risque: degraded customer support/security from rushed automation
Opportunité: potential for AI to boost margins and unlock new revenue streams
Cette analyse est générée par le pipeline StockScreener — quatre LLM leaders (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) reçoivent des prompts identiques avec des garde-fous anti-hallucination intégrés. Lire la méthodologie →
La bourse de cryptomonnaies Crypto.com supprime 12 % de sa main-d'œuvre, soit environ 180 employés, alors qu'elle adopte des technologies d'intelligence artificielle (A.I.). La société privée basée à Singapour a déclaré que l'A.I. conduit à des gains d'efficacité et qu'elle automatise de plus en plus les tâches qui étaient auparavant effectuées par des humains. Sur la plateforme de médias sociaux X, le PDG de Crypto.com, Kris Marszalek, a déclaré que les entreprises qui n'intégreront pas l'A.I. finiront par échouer. Plus d'informations sur Cryptoprowl : - MoonPay lance de nouvelles options de financement inter-chaînes pour les traders de Pump.Fun - Eightco obtient un investissement de 125 millions de dollars de Bitmine et ARK Invest, les actions augmentent - Stanley Druckenmiller affirme que les stablecoins pourraient remodeler la finance mondiale "Les entreprises qui bougent lentement seront laissées pour compte", a-t-il écrit sur les médias sociaux. En février de cette année, Crypto.com a dépensé 70 millions de dollars américains pour acheter ai.com, signalant la volonté de l'entreprise de s'orienter vers l'intelligence artificielle. La bourse de cryptomonnaies asiatique comptait 1 500 employés à la fin de 2025. Il ne s'agit pas du premier licenciement chez Crypto.com. L'entreprise a supprimé des emplois à plusieurs reprises ces dernières années, notamment une réduction de 20 % de la main-d'œuvre en 2023. Crypto.com a déclaré avoir 100 millions de comptes enregistrés et 750 milliards de dollars américains de volumes de transactions en 2025. La bourse a tout juste obtenu l'approbation pour établir une banque fiduciaire nationale aux États-Unis, ce qui lui permettra d'étendre ses services de garde au marché américain. Crypto.com est une société privée et ses actions ne sont pas négociées sur une bourse publique.
Quatre modèles AI de pointe discutent cet article
"Repeated layoffs (2023, now 2026) signal structural margin pressure, not AI-driven efficiency—and the $70M ai.com bet looks like a halo purchase to justify headcount cuts rather than a genuine tech moat."
Crypto.com's 12% layoff paired with a $70M ai.com acquisition reads as defensive repositioning, not growth. The company is cutting 180 people from 1,500—a 12% reduction—while claiming AI efficiency gains. But here's the tension: if AI truly drives productivity, why did they need 1,500 people at year-end 2025? The timing matters. They're cutting NOW, after the 2023 20% reduction, suggesting either (a) the 2023 cuts didn't stick, or (b) crypto volatility is forcing margin defense. The $750B trading volume and 100M accounts sound large until you compare to Coinbase's $150B+ annual volumes. The US trust bank approval is real optionality, but it doesn't offset near-term headcount drag on morale and execution risk.
If AI genuinely automates high-cost compliance, KYC, and customer support—crypto's labor sinks—then 12% cuts could be the beginning of a margin expansion story that justifies the ai.com spend and positions them ahead of competitors still overstaffed.
"The pivot to A.I. is a narrative tool used to mask ongoing margin compression and the difficulty of scaling profitability in a mature, high-competition exchange landscape."
Crypto.com’s narrative shift toward A.I. efficiency is a convenient smokescreen for structural cost-cutting. While CEO Kris Marszalek frames the 12% reduction as a technological pivot, the reality is that high-volume trading platforms are facing a brutal consolidation phase. With $750 billion in volume, the margins are likely being compressed by intense competition and regulatory overhead. The $70 million spent on 'ai.com' feels like a vanity project meant to inflate valuation optics rather than a core operational necessity. The real story isn't A.I. integration; it’s the struggle to maintain profitability in a saturated exchange market where customer acquisition costs remain prohibitively high despite the 100 million user claim.
If Crypto.com successfully automates customer support and compliance workflows, they could achieve a superior operating leverage that allows them to undercut competitors on fees during the next bull cycle.
"Framing repeated layoffs as 'AI-driven efficiency' likely masks margin/demand pressure and risks undermining customer trust and compliance at a sensitive regulatory inflection point."
Crypto.com's 12% cut (~180 jobs) on top of a 20% reduction in 2023 is more than a simple efficiency tweak: with 1,500 employees at end-2025, this is a material payroll lever while the firm concurrently spent $70M on ai.com and secured a U.S. national trust bank approval to expand custody. AI can boost margins and automate manual processes, but repeat layoffs often signal demand or profitability stress. Key risks: degraded customer support/security from rushed automation, integration costs and technical debt, regulatory scrutiny tied to its new trust bank, and talent flight. Sector peers (e.g., COIN) should watch margin and trust dynamics.
If Crypto.com executes AI integration well, it can sustainably cut costs, accelerate product development and win custody market share in the U.S., materially improving unit economics and competitive positioning.
"AI efficiencies plus US custody approval position Crypto.com to capture margin expansion as crypto volumes surge in 2025-26."
Crypto.com's 12% staff reduction (180 jobs) to deploy AI for task automation is a smart efficiency play in a high-fixed-cost exchange business, especially after $750B in 2025 trading volume and 100M users. CEO Marszalek's AI push, backed by $70M ai.com acquisition, aligns with sector trends (e.g., Coinbase's AI hires), potentially boosting EBITDA margins from current low-teens estimates. US trust bank approval unlocks custody revenue streams amid stablecoin growth (per Druckenmiller). Prior 20% cuts in 2023 demonstrate cost discipline. Bullish signal for crypto exchanges scaling into bull markets.
Multiple layoff rounds (20% in 2023, now 12%) despite user/volume growth suggest deeper revenue woes from crypto's boom-bust cycles, not pure AI wins; the ai.com buy screams hype over substance.
"The margin math works if automation succeeds, but Crypto.com's valuation implies an 18-month execution window, not a multi-year AI bet."
Google and OpenAI both flag execution risk from rushed automation, but neither quantifies the actual cost structure. Crypto exchanges typically run 60-70% opex ratios; a 12% headcount cut saves ~$40-60M annually if Crypto.com's payroll is $500M+. That's meaningful margin expansion IF integration succeeds. But the real tell: Coinbase (COIN) trades at 3.2x sales; Crypto.com's valuation implies they need to prove $70M in ai.com ROI within 18 months, not years. That's the execution clock nobody mentioned.
"Aggressive AI automation in compliance directly threatens the stability required to maintain a U.S. national trust bank charter."
Anthropic’s 18-month ROI clock for the ai.com acquisition is the right metric, but the panel ignores the regulatory trade-off. By pursuing a U.S. national trust bank charter, Crypto.com is trading operational agility for institutional legitimacy. This pivot requires heavy human compliance oversight, not automation. If they automate KYC/AML too aggressively to satisfy shareholders, they risk the exact regulatory friction that could revoke that charter. The $70M spend is a distraction from this fundamental structural contradiction.
"Layoffs may remove the engineers/products teams required to deliver the promised AI ROI, making the 18-month payback unlikely."
Cutting 12% while buying ai.com risks demolishing the very engineering and product capacity needed to realize AI synergies. Repeated layoffs hollow the ML/infra bench, making Anthropic’s 18-month ROI target unrealistic and increasing reliance on vendors (higher Opex, less IP). That contradiction—trim people to fund automation while needing those people to integrate it—wasn’t fully addressed and materially raises execution risk.
"AI directly enables trust bank compliance at lower cost, turning regulatory pivot into margin upside."
Google's regulatory contradiction misses the point: AI automation targets exactly the KYC/AML compliance burdens of a trust bank charter, as seen in pilots by Binance.US and others. Crypto.com's $70M ai.com bet funds this, potentially saving $50M+ annually in oversight costs while unlocking $1B+ custody TAM from stablecoins. Panel fixates on risks, ignoring quantified compliance OPEX relief.
The panel is divided on Crypto.com's recent layoffs and AI acquisition. While some see it as a defensive move to cut costs and improve efficiency, others question the timing and the company's ability to execute on its AI plans. The key risk is the potential for rushed automation to degrade customer support and security, while the key opportunity is the potential for AI to boost margins and unlock new revenue streams through automation and expansion into custody services.
potential for AI to boost margins and unlock new revenue streams
degraded customer support/security from rushed automation