USDT live
Supply 112.4B +0.8%
Tron share 53.2%
ETH share 38.4%
TRC20 gas $0.95 -2.1%
ERC20 gas $4.20
24h volume $48.2B
English · 中文

Circle Stock Down 74% From Its High: The Issuer Is Under Pressure — What Does It Mean for the U-Card in Your Wallet

2026-06-15

USDC issuer Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) has seen its stock fall about 74% from its 52-week high. According to Tokenpost’s report, the company’s shares have dropped from a post-IPO peak (the report cites roughly $298.99) to a recent range around $77.84, with a single-day decline of about 5.8%. The report attributes the drop mainly to shifting interest-rate expectations — Circle’s core revenue comes from interest earned on its reserve assets (short-term U.S. Treasuries and the like), and market expectations of rate cuts directly compress the outlook for this income stream. The report also notes the company is still not profitable (negative P/E), and analyst opinions are divided.

One key distinction needs to be made up front: Circle’s stock price ≠ USDC’s peg. The stock price reflects earnings expectations for this publicly listed company, while USDC’s 1:1 peg depends on whether its reserve assets are real, sufficient, and redeemable. These are two separate things. Below, we break this down layer by layer for U-card users.

Editorial take: the actual impact on cardholders

If you hold a USDT virtual card — such as our editor’s pick MPCard or Bybit Card — the direct impact of this news is close to zero. Your card balance is denominated in ₮ (USDT), issued by Tether, with no settlement-chain relationship to Circle’s earnings.

What genuinely warrants attention are users who also hold USDC balances or top up with USDC, typically including:

Within 7 days: no card functionality will change; USDC remains fully redeemable and usable for payments as normal. Within 30 days: watch for whether Circle issues any announcement about adjusting its profit model — for example, changing reserve-yield revenue sharing or partner incentive structures. Within 90 days: if the rate-cutting cycle continues, Circle may accelerate efforts to develop revenue sources beyond USDC (on-chain services, cross-border payments) — these strategic moves are the real variables shaping the long-term stablecoin landscape.

Historical comparison: stock volatility vs. a genuine de-peg crisis

Placing this alongside two historical events makes the boundaries clearer.

The brief USDC de-peg of March 2023: When Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapsed, roughly $3.3 billion of Circle’s reserves was temporarily trapped, and USDC briefly fell to around $0.87. That was a real risk at the reserve-asset level, directly threatening the peg — an entirely different magnitude from today’s “stock decline.” U.S. regulators ultimately made SVB depositors whole, and USDC re-pegged within days.

What’s different this time: there are currently no reports of USDC reserves being frozen or unredeemable. This is a repricing of the company’s valuation — the market is recalculating “how much is a business model built on reserve interest income still worth in a low-rate environment?” It tests Circle’s long-term profitability as a company, not whether USDC can redeem 1:1 this week.

What’s similar: both episodes remind holders that a stablecoin issuer’s health ultimately transmits to ordinary users through redemption guarantees and partner policies. Spreading holdings across different stablecoins and issuers remains basic risk management.

Regulatory and compliance perspective

Stablecoin issuers’ profit models are increasingly coming under regulatory scrutiny. Discussions in the U.S. market about reserve asset composition, ownership of interest income, and whether stablecoins constitute “securities” are ongoing — see our U.S. compliance guide for more. On the EU side, the MiCAR framework imposes explicit requirements on stablecoin issuers’ reserves and disclosures; see our EU compliance guide for details.

One boundary needs to be clear: as of now, the legal issuance, holding, and use of USDC as a stablecoin has not been banned in major jurisdictions. Current disputes center on commercial and tax questions like “how issuers allocate reserve income,” which fall under corporate governance and regulatory coordination — not “USDC itself being illegal.” In other words, for cardholders, this remains within the range of “clearly permitted to use, but with regulatory uncertainty around the issuer’s business model.”

Key milestones worth watching next

  1. Circle’s next quarterly earnings report — pay attention to the share of reserve interest income and any growth in non-interest revenue; this is the core data for judging whether the stock is “oversold” or undergoing “value repricing”;
  2. The Federal Reserve’s rate path — every rate decision directly affects market expectations for Circle’s reserve income, and in turn its stock price;
  3. Any official Circle announcement on reserve-yield revenue sharing — adjustments to the profit-sharing structure with partners like Coinbase could indirectly affect actual returns for USDC holders;
  4. USDC’s on-chain circulating supply — this is the hard metric of stablecoin health, and reflects genuine demand far better than the stock price does. We recommend cross-checking Circle’s official investor page against public on-chain data.

Editorial recommendations

We’ll continue tracking Circle’s earnings and USDC’s on-chain circulation data, and will update this article if any substantive change affecting cardholder settlement emerges.