Circle Internet Group stock had a rough Tuesday. The stablecoin issuer behind USDC fell 20% after investors got a closer look at a proposed provision in the Clarity Act — a key piece of legislation aimed at creating a regulatory framework for digital assets.
Circle Internet Group, CRCL
The provision in question would prohibit platforms from offering yield on customer stablecoin holdings in a way that resembles a bank deposit. For Circle, that’s a real problem. The company earns most of its revenue from interest on USDC reserves, and yield has been one of the main draws for users holding the coin.
By Wednesday morning, CRCL had clawed back some of those losses, rising about 3.4% to $104.61 in early trading. Still, the stock remains down roughly 65% from its 52-week high of $298.99.
The Clarity Act has not been passed yet. It is intended to clarify whether digital assets are treated as securities or commodities — something the crypto industry has been waiting on for years. But investors are now worried the bill could pass in a form that limits USDC’s appeal.
There’s also a timing issue. If the bill doesn’t get through Congress this year, midterm elections in November could shift the balance of power. A less crypto-friendly Congress could make favorable legislation harder to push through.
Tether added to the noise on the same day. The issuer of USDT — the world’s largest stablecoin — announced it had hired a Big Four accounting firm for its first full independent audit. That raised speculation about a potential push into U.S. markets, where Circle currently has a stronger compliance foothold.
Not everyone was selling. Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest picked up more than 160,000 CRCL shares across three of its ETFs on Tuesday, per its daily trade log. At CRCL’s Tuesday closing price of $101.17, that haul came to around $16.2 million.
Analysts also pushed back on the panic. Clear Street’s Owen Lau kept his Buy rating and $152 price target, noting the selloff shouldn’t be read as a sign that the stablecoin thesis is broken. He pointed out that the revised Clarity Act language may still leave room for activity-based rewards on USDC — just not passive yield that looks like a bank deposit.
William Blair’s Andrew Jeffrey also told investors to use the dip as a buying opportunity. In his view, neither the Tether audit news nor the Clarity Act provision changes Circle’s long-term story around cross-border stablecoin adoption.
Jeffrey noted that USDC adoption continues to grow and Circle’s distribution network is expanding. He maintained an Outperform rating on the stock.
The central question for investors, as Lau framed it, is whether users and institutions still need a regulated, dollar-denominated settlement asset that runs around the clock. His answer: yes.
Circle’s stock has been volatile since going public, swinging between a 52-week low of $31.00 and a high of $298.99. The market cap currently sits around $25 billion, with average daily volume of 15 million shares.
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