Charts
DataOn-chain
VIP
Market Cap
API
Rankings
CoinOSNew
CoinClaw🦞
Language
  • 简体中文
  • 繁体中文
  • English
Leader in global market data applications, committed to providing valuable information more efficiently.

Features

  • Real-time Data
  • Special Features
  • AI Grid

Services

  • News
  • Open Data(API)
  • Institutional Services

Downloads

  • Desktop
  • Android
  • iOS

Contact Us

  • Chat Room
  • Business Email
  • Official Email
  • Official Verification

Join Community

  • Telegram
  • Twitter
  • Discord

© Copyright 2013-2026. All rights reserved.

简体繁體English
|Legacy

Circle selloff may be overdone as crypto bill weakens Coinbase edge, say analysts

CN
coindesk
Follow
3 hours ago
AI summarizes in 5 seconds.


What to know : Circle’s stock plunged 20% Tuesday after the CLARITY Act’s stance on stablecoin yield, but analysts argue the new rules may ultimately shift economic power toward the company as a regulated issuer. Because Coinbase currently captures a large share of USDC interest income through its distribution deal with Circle, limits on yield-like rewards could erode Coinbase’s high-margin stablecoin revenue and strengthen Circle’s hand in their 2026 renegotiation. Some investors see the selloff in Circle as overdone, noting that stablecoin demand is driven more by payments and settlement utility than yield, and projecting that regulation and market growth could support a Circle valuation of around $75 billion.

Circle (CRCL) was hit far harder than Coinbase (COIN) in Tuesday's sharp selloff due to the crypto bill CLARITY Act's latest stance on stablecoin yield, but one analyst says the regulatory shift may ultimately favor the stablecoin issuer.

Both names are seeing modest bounces on Wednesday, but remain solidly lower since the news leaked Monday evening.

The market may be missing the longer-term implication, argued Markus Thielen, founder of 10x Research: in the current form, the bill weakens Coinbase's distribution-driven model more than Circle's infrastructure role.

Coinbase currently captures the majority of USDC economics through its distribution agreement with Circle, Thielen explained. For USDC held on Coinbase, the exchange receives nearly all of the associated interest income, while off-platform balances are generally split about 50%-50. In practice, Thielen estimates that Circle pays Coinbase more than $900 million in revenue share each year, roughly half of Circle’s total revenue.

That arrangement has made stablecoin revenue a high-margin business for Coinbase. But if regulators shut down yield-like rewards on balances, part of that advantage may fade, Thielen said.

"The setup increasingly favors Circle on a relative basis," Thielen wrote, arguing that the federal framework would shift value toward regulated issuers with compliance, scale and a credible balance sheet.

That could matter even more ahead of the two companies’ next commercial renegotiation in August 2026. Under a stricter federal regime, Thielen sees a better chance that Circle wins improved terms.

Circle could be worth double

Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan, meanwhile, said the selloff in Circle looks "overblown" as the CLARITY Act doesn’t change the long-term investment case.

Yield hasn’t been the main draw to stablecoins, he wrote in a Wednesday note. Most stablecoins don’t pay interest, yet adoption has surged because they make it easier to move dollars across borders, settle trades and access blockchain-based financial rails. In that sense, restricting yield doesn’t change the core use case.

Hougan points to forecasts projecting the market could grow to $1.9 trillion, or even $4 trillion, by the end of the decade. Circle, with a strong position in regulated stablecoins, stands to benefit if more activity shifts toward compliant, onshore players.

He also sees a potential upside from regulation itself. Limiting yield passthrough could reduce the revenue Circle shares with partners like Coinbase, helping improve margins over time.

Altogether, Hougan sees a path for Circle to grow to a much larger valuation — potentially around $75 billion, roughly double its current level.

"If stablecoins play out the way people think," Hougan wrote, "you can be fairly conservative on most assumptions and still find Circle looking attractive."

免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

Gate 13周年狂欢,注册赢走万元礼包
广告
|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Selected Articles by coindesk

1 hour ago
Crypto Long & Short: Prediction Markets Don’t Just Forecast Power - They Reshape It
1 hour ago
AI agents to help investigators unearth crypto criminals, according to new TRM program
1 hour ago
U.S. lawmakers dig into tokenizing securities as Trump ties muddy waters
View More

Table of Contents

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Related Articles

avatar
avatarDecrypt
13 minutes ago
F1 Champion McLaren Racing Joins Hedera Council to Help Govern Network
avatar
avatarDecrypt
31 minutes ago
Circle Selloff \\\'Looks Overdone\\\' Analysts Say as Shares Rise After Cathie Wood Buys the Dip
avatar
avatarbitcoin.com
40 minutes ago
Bitcoin Surges to $72K Peak Following Reports of Washington’s Ceasefire Proposal
avatar
avatarcoindesk
1 hour ago
Crypto Long & Short: Prediction Markets Don’t Just Forecast Power - They Reshape It
avatar
avatarcoindesk
1 hour ago
AI agents to help investigators unearth crypto criminals, according to new TRM program
APP
Windows
Mac

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink