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Circle Insiders' Large-Scale Stock Sale: USDC Reserves Untouched, But Here's What to Understand

2026-06-09

USDC issuer Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) closed up 2.63% on June 8, ending at $82.39, a $2.11 gain from the prior session’s $80.28. But what the market was actually focused on that day wasn’t the gain-it was the large-scale stock sale plan filed with the SEC by Circle insiders and affiliated parties. Circle is the issuer of USDC, the world’s second-largest stablecoin, and its share price is highly sensitive to crypto market swings-a textbook “crypto-adjacent stock.”

First, let’s clear up the most common point of confusion

When people see a headline like “USDC issuer’s insiders sell off shares in bulk,” the first reaction is often: is something wrong with USDC? Is the card I fund with USDC at risk?

No. These are two entirely different things.

Insider stock sales fall into the first category. After a public company’s IPO lock-up period ends, insiders filing sale documents with the SEC (such as Form 144 or S-1 resale registrations) is standard practice, with no direct bearing on USDC’s reserve size, redemption capacity, or collateralization ratio.

The practical impact on USDT virtual card users

The bottom line: for the vast majority of USDT virtual card users, this news has zero practical impact.

That’s because the funding path for most mainstream USDT cards is “USDT → in-platform conversion → card balance,” which doesn’t involve USDC at all. Our editorially selected MPCard review covers the Asia Elite variant, which runs on an Asia-Pacific USDT funding route and doesn’t depend on USDC reserves. Even for cards that do support USDC top-ups, what’s affected is the redeemability of “the USDC stablecoin”-not “Circle’s company share price.”

Here’s what to expect over different time windows:

If you’re currently choosing a primary card, rather than watching the issuer’s stock price, it’s more useful to check the 2026 USDT Card Top 5 and the Lowest-Fee Card Comparison-pages directly tied to your day-to-day costs.

Historical comparison: what a real concern actually looks like

To understand the difference between an “equity event” and a “reserve event,” the best comparison is the USDC depeg event of March 2023.

In March 2023, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapsed. Circle disclosed at the time that a portion of USDC’s cash reserves was held at SVB, and the market feared that portion of the reserves might be unrecoverable. USDC briefly fell below $1, hitting a low of about $0.877 (March 11, 2023). That was a genuine reserve event-it directly threatened USDC’s 1:1 redemption, and any card funded with USDC was affected. US regulators subsequently stepped in, SVB deposits were fully guaranteed, and USDC re-pegged to around $1 within a few days.

Placing the two side by side:

Dimension2023 SVB Reserve Event2026 Insider Stock Sale
What’s affectedUSDC redemption (the stablecoin itself)CRCL share price (company equity)
Impact on cardholdersDirect-USDC-funded cards were hitIndirect, near zero
UrgencyHigh-required close monitoringLow-routine market activity

What they share: both involve the name “Circle.” What differs: one moves the stablecoin’s reserves; the other moves the company’s stock-and the latter won’t devalue your USDC.

Regulatory and compliance perspective

As a US-listed company, Circle’s insider stock sales are governed by SEC disclosure rules, and the relevant filings can be publicly searched via SEC EDGAR. This falls squarely within the “clearly permitted” compliance zone-filing disclosure documents per the rules and selling on a set schedule is entirely lawful in itself.

For USDT card users in the Asia-Pacific region, what’s more worth tracking is the local legal boundaries of the stablecoin itself, rather than the equity movements of a US-listed company. Hong Kong has already put a stablecoin issuer regulatory framework in place-see our Hong Kong Stablecoin Compliance Guide for details. If you’re using a card in Singapore, the Singapore Compliance Guide is more directly relevant to your usage scenario. These are the factors that would actually change whether you can use your card normally.

Key milestones worth watching next

Editorial recommendations

Keep one simple rule of thumb in mind: don’t worry when you see “Circle share price”-act only when you see “USDC depeg.”