Circle chief executive Jeremy Allaire pushed back on rising competition from the newly announced OpenUSD stablecoin, arguing that scale, liquidity, and regulatory infrastructure remain difficult barriers for new entrants to overcome. His remarks followed the June 30 debut of OpenUSD, a dollar-pegged token backed by 140 global firms, which briefly sent Circle’s shares down more than 17% before a partial recovery left them closing 1.09% lower the next day.
Market dominance remains concentrated
New data from blockchain analytics firm Artemis shows USD Coin (USDC) continues to dominate on-chain dollar settlements. In the first quarter of 2026, USDC processed 30 trillion dollars in transactions, accounting for 80% of total volume. Tether’s USDT made up the remaining 20%, while all other dollar-linked tokens combined contributed less than 0.5%.
The broader market structure reflects that concentration. As of late June, total stablecoin market capitalization stood at about 314.68 billion dollars, with USDT holding a 59.22% share and USDC at 23.80%. Together, the two tokens control more than 83% of the market, reinforcing the network effects Allaire described.
Circle points to long-built infrastructure
Allaire emphasized that USDC’s network has taken nearly a decade to develop, now spanning thousands of applications across decentralized finance, payments, and traditional financial systems. He described it as the largest liquidity network in the digital dollar sector.
He also highlighted Circle’s regulatory positioning, noting USDC is currently the only major stablecoin fully operable in both Europe and Japan, supported by multiple licenses. Infrastructure tools such as Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol and Gateway software were built to improve interoperability and global liquidity.
OpenUSD introduces aggressive model
OpenUSD, backed by major companies including Visa, Mastercard, BlackRock, and Google, is positioning itself as a direct challenger. Its model centers on returning most reserve income to partners while offering free minting and redemption, targeting a key revenue stream used by existing issuers.
Allaire criticized alliance-driven structures, arguing that profit-sharing frameworks can reduce efficiency and limit long-term investment. He said such collaborations often face coordination challenges and inconsistent incentives, slowing development.
Circle’s own experience with multi-company alliances led it to shift toward smaller, more focused partnerships, which Allaire said allow faster execution and more consistent product delivery.
Financial performance and reinvestment strategy
Circle reported 694 million dollars in revenue for the first quarter of 2026, with 407 million, or 59%, distributed to partners. The remaining portion was reinvested into infrastructure to maintain system performance and security.
The company continues expanding its ecosystem through initiatives such as Arc, StableFX, and CCTP, working with issuers and financial institutions on settlement and deployment capabilities.
Key indicators to watch
Traders are now assessing whether OpenUSD’s large consortium can translate into real transaction activity. Early traction will likely be measured through on-chain usage rather than announced partnerships.
Attention is also on USDC’s circulating supply, which stood at 74.89 billion dollars. Any sustained decline could signal a shift toward competing tokens offering more attractive economic incentives.
Regulatory progress remains another critical factor. With Europe’s MiCA framework in place and ongoing developments in the United States, OpenUSD’s ability to secure licenses will be a key test. Circle’s established compliance footprint in multiple jurisdictions continues to serve as a competitive advantage as the market evolves.
Want deeper context on dollar-pegged assets and regulation? Explore this stablecoin adoption guide next.
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