Circle Stock Drops After Open USD Launch – Here Is Why the Stablecoin Race Is Heating Up

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  • Circle shares fell about 13% after Open USD was unveiled with backing from more than 140 companies.
  • Open USD plans to offer fee-free minting, free redemptions, and shared reserve income for ecosystem partners.
  • Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire says USDC remains the leading institutional stablecoin despite the growing competition.

Circle came under heavy selling pressure on Tuesday after the launch of Open USD (OUSD), a new stablecoin backed by more than 140 companies, including BlackRock, Google, Visa, Coinbase, and several other financial and technology giants.

Circle’s stock dropped roughly 13%, falling to around $65—its lowest level in four months—before trimming some of those losses later in the trading session.

The decline reflects growing investor concerns that Open USD could intensify competition in the rapidly expanding stablecoin market.

Open USD Takes Aim at the Stablecoin Market

Developed by Open Standard under the leadership of Bridge co-founder Zach Abrams, Open USD is positioning itself as an open, partner-governed alternative to existing stablecoins.

Unlike traditional issuers, Open USD will allow businesses to mint and redeem tokens without fees while distributing most of its reserve income back to ecosystem participants. Governance will also be handled by an independent organization rather than a single company.

That model directly challenges one of Circle’s primary business advantages—earning revenue from reserve assets backing USDC—while offering partners a larger share of the economics.

The structure is similar to incentive models already used by projects such as Paxos’ Global Dollar Network.

Why Investors Reacted

The announcement arrives as stablecoins become increasingly important across payments, corporate treasury management, tokenization, and cross-border settlements.

With more than 140 companies supporting Open USD from launch, investors appear concerned that large financial institutions and payment providers could diversify away from existing stablecoin networks over time.

Although USDC remains one of the world’s largest regulated stablecoins, the entrance of another well-funded competitor introduces additional pressure in what is becoming one of crypto‘s fastest-growing sectors.

Circle Says USDC Remains the Leader

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire sought to reassure investors following the announcement, arguing that the stablecoin market is large enough to support multiple successful issuers.

He said Circle will continue expanding USDC by investing in institutional partnerships across banking, payments, capital markets, and enterprise infrastructure.

According to Allaire, USDC remains the most widely adopted institutional-grade stablecoin, supported by thousands of partners across multiple industries.

Circle also plans to continue increasing USDC’s interoperability across blockchain networks while giving additional partners opportunities to participate in the ecosystem’s growth.

Stablecoin Competition Is Accelerating

The launch of Open USD highlights how quickly competition is intensifying within the stablecoin industry.

Rather than competing solely on transaction volume, issuers are increasingly differentiating themselves through governance models, reserve-sharing mechanisms, institutional integrations, and payment infrastructure.

As global adoption of stablecoins continues accelerating, investors will likely focus on which networks can attract the largest institutional ecosystems while maintaining regulatory compliance and liquidity.

For Circle, Tuesday’s market reaction underscores that Wall Street expects the battle for stablecoin dominance to become much more competitive in the years ahead.

Disclaimer: BlockNews provides independent reporting on crypto, blockchain, and digital finance. All content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Readers should do their own research before making investment decisions. Some articles may use AI tools to assist in drafting, but every piece is reviewed and edited by our editorial team of experienced crypto writers and analysts before publication.

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