Circle’s latest pressure came as CRCL was removed from multiple Russell Growth-related benchmarks during the June 2026 Russell reconstitution. According to Simply Wall St, the removals affected five prominent Russell Growth benchmarks that many institutional and passive funds track. (Note: As confirmed by its official IPO announcement, Circle is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, not Nasdaq.)
This type of index adjustment can matter because Russell indexes are not just symbolic labels. As noted when FTSE Russell Begins June 2026 Semi-Annual Russell US Indexes Reconstitution, the changes took effect after U.S. equity markets closed on June 26, with the newly recalibrated indexes beginning to operate from the open on June 29. FTSE Russell also said about $12.2 trillion in investor assets are benchmarked to, or invested in products based on, Russell U.S. indexes.
When a stock leaves a major benchmark, some funds may need to reduce or rebalance exposure. That does not necessarily mean every investor has changed their fundamental view of the company. But it can create near-term selling pressure, reduce passive ownership, and weaken index-linked demand.
For CRCL, the more important signal is not just mechanical selling. It is the change in market label. Circle has historically been treated as a regulated stablecoin leader with growth-stock characteristics, sitting at the intersection of crypto, payments, financial infrastructure, and tokenized dollars. That made it easier for the market to attach a growth premium to CRCL. Russell Growth removal does not erase that story, but it does make investors more willing to question whether CRCL still deserves a premium growth multiple.
The timing of the Russell Growth removal became more important because it arrived alongside a second pressure point: Open USD.
A consortium including Visa, Mastercard jointly launch new global stablecoin named Open USD, expected to go live later this year. The key concern for Circle is not simply that another stablecoin is entering the market. The concern is that Open USD appears to push the industry toward a more partner-friendly reserve-income sharing model.
According to Reuters, Open USD will allow businesses to mint and redeem without cost or volume limits, and earnings from Open USD’s reserves will be shared among the initiative’s partners after a management fee.
That is the part investors care about. Circle’s USDC business has historically benefited from reserve income, especially when interest rates are high. If new stablecoin networks compete by sharing reserve economics with distribution partners, the market may start asking whether Circle can keep the same level of economics over time. This turns the stablecoin debate from “Who has the most trusted regulated stablecoin?” into “Who controls distribution, and who captures the economics from reserves?”
Circle still has major strengths. USDC is one of the most recognized stablecoins in the market, deeply integrated across crypto trading venues, wallets, DeFi protocols, payment infrastructure, and institutional workflows. Circle also benefits from its regulated positioning at a time when stablecoins are becoming more important to both crypto markets and traditional finance.
But public-market investors do not only price today’s market position; they price the durability of future cash flows. If the industry shifts toward lower-cost issuance, shared reserve economics, and stronger bargaining power for distribution partners, Circle’s long-term margin profile may face more pressure than the early bull case assumed. For Circle, that means the public-market story is no longer just about stablecoin adoption—it is about how much of the stablecoin profit pool Circle can keep.
The bullish interpretation is that the recent pressure is mostly technical. Russell-related selling can create short-term dislocation. If that is the main driver, the selling pressure should fade after rebalancing flows are absorbed. In that scenario, traders would look for signs of stabilization:
The bearish interpretation is more structural. If CRCL continues to weaken after the index-related selling pressure passes, it would suggest investors are cutting the long-term valuation multiple because Circle’s reserve-income model looks less protected than before.
The CRCL selloff is not just about an index adjustment. Russell Growth removal may have created technical selling pressure, but Open USD has raised a more fundamental question about Circle’s long-term stablecoin economics.
The key debate is whether Circle is still a high-growth crypto infrastructure leader with durable reserve-income economics, or whether it should be valued more like a financial infrastructure company exposed to interest rates, distribution partners, and intensifying stablecoin competition. That is the real story behind CRCL’s latest repricing.
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