Shares of Circle experienced a sharp decline exceeding 16% on Tuesday following the public debut of Open Standard, a newly formed consortium introducing the Open USD stablecoin initiative.
Circle Internet Group, CRCL
The coalition boasts more than 140 corporate participants, featuring industry heavyweights such as Stripe, Coinbase, Visa, Mastercard, and BlackRock.
The fundamental value proposition of Open USD is clear-cut. Rather than the stablecoin provider retaining interest income generated from reserve assets, Open Standard intends to share this revenue stream with member organizations.
This model presents a direct challenge to how Circle generates revenue. The company’s profitability relies heavily on capturing interest earned from the assets supporting USDC.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire addressed the development via social media, characterizing USDC as “the most trusted, widely adopted, institutional-ready stablecoin in the world.” He emphasized the company’s commitment to continued innovation while acknowledging the competitive landscape.
Not all market observers interpret the competitive threat as severely as Tuesday’s price action might indicate.
William Blair analysts maintained their Outperform rating on Circle stock and suggested investors view the session’s decline as an attractive entry point.
They characterized competitive worries as “overblown,” highlighting USDC’s approximately $74 billion market capitalization and Circle’s established payment infrastructure network.
The research team also drew parallels to previous payment consortiums such as MCX and Paze, which struggled to achieve meaningful adoption against incumbent platforms.
Rob Hadick from venture capital firm Dragonfly acknowledged that the partner roster represents a legitimate competitive concern but cautioned that consortium structures face inherent challenges. “Incentives are broad and often misaligned,” he noted.
Market analysts also highlighted that Open Standard’s announcement omitted essential operational details.
The consortium failed to specify which blockchain networks will host Open USD, how interest revenue will be allocated among partners, or what governance framework will guide the organization.
As a reference point, Paxos introduced its consortium-supported stablecoin in late 2024. It has achieved $3 billion in circulation—significantly trailing USDC’s $73 billion and Tether’s $145 billion.
The announcement also drew attention to Circle’s current partnership agreement with Coinbase, which reportedly faces renewal discussions in August.
Open USD is scheduled to launch in late 2026. Until that time arrives, its actual influence on USDC’s market position remains speculative.
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