Coinbase has flipped the switch on full trading for Wrapped Ronin (WRON) and Nexus (NEX) against the US dollar, making limit, market, and stop orders live on both Coinbase Exchange and Coinbase Advanced. The move also encompasses expanded USDC pair availability, continuing a pattern that has quietly turned Coinbase into one of the most pair-dense exchanges in the market.
What changed, and why it matters
WRON and NEX followed Coinbase’s standard rollout playbook. The exchange first signaled WRON’s listing on April 29, with trading officially beginning on May 1 after a brief delay. NEX took a slightly different path, with deposits opening shortly before its mainnet launch around May 20.
NEX arrived with a notable splash. Its market cap surged to approximately $300 million around the time of its mainnet launch. WRON, the wrapped version of the Ronin network’s native token, gives traders exposure to the Ronin ecosystem — the blockchain behind Axie Infinity — without needing to interact directly with the Ronin chain.
The USDC pair expansion is the quieter, bigger story
Coinbase now supports 237 USDC trading pairs. The exchange has been building unified USD-USDC order books, meaning that whether you’re trading with actual dollars or with Circle’s stablecoin, you’re pulling from the same pool of liquidity. Coinbase, which has a revenue-sharing arrangement with Circle on USDC reserves, has an obvious financial incentive to push this direction.
For international users who can’t easily deposit USD, USDC becomes their primary on-ramp. Having 237 pairs with unified liquidity means non-US traders are no longer stuck with thin order books and wide spreads on less popular tokens.
What this means for investors
For NEX, the timing is particularly interesting. A token hitting full trading status within days of its mainnet launch suggests Coinbase was closely coordinating with the Nexus team, or at minimum had high confidence in the token’s liquidity profile. A $300 million market cap at launch puts NEX in the mid-tier range, large enough to support meaningful order book depth but small enough that exchange-driven volume shifts can move the price.
Newly listed tokens with fresh mainnet launches carry elevated technical and market risk. Smart contracts haven’t been battle-tested by time. Liquidity, while sufficient for a Coinbase listing, can evaporate during stress events. The availability of stop orders helps manage downside exposure, but it doesn’t eliminate it.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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