The resignations of top executives at Coinbase and Grayscale, two of the largest cryptocurrency companies, are rumored to be related to stricter cryptocurrency regulations, with top executives at both companies scheduled to resign this week. Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s chief legal officer, and Edward McGee, Grayscale’s chief financial officer, announced their exits within hours of each other.
Both men retired amicably after several years in office, and both companies quickly named internal replacements. Neither cited the conflict as a reason for stepping down from their respective key positions.
These exits diminished as the cryptocurrency’s market cap rose +1% overnight to reach $2.25 trillion, with Bitcoin regaining $64,000 and a daily price move of +2.2%, raising the possibility of a retest of $65,000.
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1. Bitcoin rises above $63,000 as easing oil prices increases risk appetite and sees new inflows into spot ETFs. 
2. Coinbase CLO Paul Grewal resigns after leading major SEC battle and transitions to advisory role. 
3. Grayscale CFO Edward McGee retires… pic.twitter.com/PzUzNp0Bxt
— GroveX (@GroveXchange) July 10, 2026
Coinbase’s head of legal affairs retires after six years
On July 8, Mr. Grewal notified Coinbase that he would be stepping down as chief legal officer and secretary, effective July 31. He joined the company from Facebook in 2020, where he served as deputy general counsel. Prior to that, he spent more than five years as a federal judge.
During his tenure, Grewal was instrumental in the listing of Coinbase in April 2021. With the Nasdaq direct listing, Coinbase becomes the first major U.S. cryptocurrency exchange to conduct public trading. He then led the defense after the SEC sued Coinbase in 2023.
The agency dismissed the case with prejudice and without imposing a fine in early 2025. Grewal also supported moving Coinbase from Delaware to Texas and pushing for federal cryptocurrency regulations.
He summed up these battles in a farewell note. “He helped take the company public, fought the SEC and won, moved us from Delaware to Texas, fought for GENIUS, and soon CLARITY became law… Now it’s time for a new adventure.”
Molly Abraham, vice president of legal affairs, will become general counsel. Mr. Grewal also named Ryan Vangrak as vice chairman. Grewal will continue to advise Coinbase and remain on the trust company’s board of directors until October.
After 6 years of working, I am leaving @Coinbase. I will transition into an advisory role at the end of the month and continue to serve on the board of directors of Coinbase National Trust Company. I have been a lifelong Coinbase ally and am grateful to @brian_armstrong, @emilemc, and the Coinbase Board of Directors…
— Paul Grewal (@iampaulgrewal) July 9, 2026
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Grayscale CFO retires after seven years in office due to expanding cryptocurrency regulations
Edward McGee stepped down as chief financial officer on July 2, ending seven years at the company, which is owned by Digital Currency Group. Grayscale said he was leaving for personal reasons and thanked him for his contributions.
His tenure marked a turning point for the company. In August 2023, a federal appeals court ruled that the SEC had wrongly denied Grayscale’s application. With this decision, the SEC will approve a spot Bitcoin ETF in January 2024.
That same month, Grayscale converted its flagship Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC). The fund held about $26.5 billion at the time. Its 1.5% fee is six times higher than the 0.25% fee charged by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust. This difference reduces the total amount to approximately $10.5 billion by the end of March 2026.
McGee also supported Grayscale filing for a confidential IPO in 2025, but the company has since put its filing on hold. Kathryn Masci and Daniel Prude, both senior finance executives, will serve as interim co-chief financial officers. Mr. Masci will also join the Board of Directors and serve as Chief Financial and Accounting Officer.
Breaking News: Grayscale Kembali Kehirangan Executif Sr.
CFO Edward Magee Resmi Mengandulkan Diri Setera 7 Tahun di Perusahan, Hanya Beberapa Ming Setera Distribution Manager, John Hoffman, Hengkan ke Ondo Finance.
Apa altiña bagi pasar?
Grayscale Menegascan… pic.twitter.com/7TFLnq6dsa
— 𝔻𝕠𝕟 ℂ𝕒𝕣𝕝𝕚𝕥𝕠 (@Cryptorealis) July 9, 2026
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What the Senior Coinbase and Grayscale exits imply
Both departures come as Washington moves toward clearer crypto regulatory rules. The GENIUS Act was signed into law in July 2025, but the CLARITY Act still awaits a full Senate vote.
Wyoming Republican Sen. Cynthia Lummis said in a post on X on Wednesday that the CLARITY Act may be the last chance to pass an actual digital asset bill by 2030.
“If we fail to pass the CLARITY Act, we are ensuring that other countries will write the rules around digital assets, and we will spend the next decade catching up,” Lummis said.
A month without clear digital asset rules is a month where another country writes the rules for us. It’s not a risk. It’s already happening.
— Sen. Cynthia Lummis (@SenLummis) July 9, 2026
“I agree. It’s time to consider and vote on the CLARITY Act this month,” Ohio Sen. Bernie Moreno said in a reply to Lummis’ post.
Cryptocurrency advocacy group Stand With Crypto called on supporters in a post on X on Tuesday (July 7) to contact their senators when they return from recess on Monday (July 13) to call for them to schedule a vote on the bill.
The next recess is Aug. 8, so the CLARITY Act faces a tight deadline of Aug. 7 for Senate passage, but by pushing from within, both companies demonstrated continuity rather than a change in direction. The coming months will show how the new leadership handles the next steps.
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The post Coinbase CLO and Grayscale CFO both exit as crypto regulatory era begins appeared first on 99Bitcoins.

Breaking News: Grayscale Kembali Kehirangan Executif Sr.
Grayscale Menegascan… pic.twitter.com/7TFLnq6dsa