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Circle Builds a New Payments Network--And It Could Reroute the Flow of Digital Money

Circle Builds a New Payments Network--And It Could Reroute the Flow of Digital Money

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Fresh off a blockbuster IPO that's sent shares soaring over 350%, the stablecoin powerhouse has launched its own blockchain, Arc a move that could reshape how digital dollars move. Arc pairs with Circle's (NYSE:CRCL) earlier Circle Payments Network, aiming to handle everything from compliance to final settlement, end-to-end. It's a bold pivot from just issuing USDC to now powering the rails beneath it a strategy that puts Circle in direct competition with Visa (NYSE:V), Mastercard (NYSE:MA), and the crypto networks it once relied on. The company still pulls in most of its revenue from interest on USDC reserves, but with rate cuts looming, that stream could shrink fast. Owning the infrastructure? That's Circle's next bet.
Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Sign with CRCL.
They're not alone. Stripe's secret blockchain project, Tempo, surfaced through a now-deleted job post signaling that it too wants to own the full stack of stablecoin payments. JPMorgan is going hybrid: running its private Kinexys platform while testing stablecoin rails on public chain Base. Fireblocks has already integrated Arc, potentially opening the system to over 2,400 institutions. The playbook is starting to look familiar control the network, control the flow of money. But this new wave of closed-loop systems is raising eyebrows across the industry. What was supposed to be a decentralized revolution is starting to look a lot like a rebranded Visa model only this time, with programmable money and new gatekeepers.
Still, Circle insists it's not locking the doors. It continues to support USDC on public chains and is rolling out cross-chain tools to keep the system interoperable. But building infrastructure is one thing. Convincing the rest of the market to use it is another. Analysts are watching closely. David Koning at Baird flagged that Circle shelled out 62% of its Q2 revenue over $400 million just to keep distribution partners like Coinbase onboard. Non-interest income? Trending lower. The challenge ahead is clear: build the rails, attract the traffic, and keep enough margin to make the math work. The stablecoin wars are here and Circle's not backing down.
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.
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