Tech and Finance Firms Redraw Stablecoin Map; Circle Shares Fall 18% on Open USD Launch Before Rebound

Circle shares fell 18% following the Open USD stablecoin launch before rebounding on Thursday. Analysis characterized the competitive dynamic as a structural shift in stablecoin market dominance from issuers such as Circle toward network controllers and consortium participants.
Story timeline · 5 days
Latest: Circle shares fell 18% on the Open USD launch before rebounding Thursday, with new analysis framing the competitive shift as moving stablecoin dominance from issuers to network controllers.
Story timeline · 5 days
- Jul 5, 20265OpenUSD Stablecoin Alliance Under Scrutiny Over Partner Misrepresentation Claims
Additional coverage confirmed OpenUSD misrepresented its partner mix, with scrutiny extending beyond Samsung's dispute to the broader claimed 149-member coalition's accuracy.
- Jul 4, 20268BlackRock and Visa Back OUSD; Samsung and Korean Firms Dispute Membership Claims
Samsung and Dunamu denied joining the OUSD consortium without consultation; Upbit also rejected claimed participation; Open USD's reported 149 partnerships faced fraud allegations.
- Jul 3, 20267· this storyTech and Finance Firms Redraw Stablecoin Map; Circle Shares Fall 18% on Open USD Launch Before Rebound
- Jul 2, 20267Open USD Launches; USDC Competitive Dynamics and Circle Revenue Threat Debated
Circle CEO responded publicly to OUSD threat; Jefferies warned against buying the dip in Circle; Ark Invest bought $18M in Circle shares; analysis framed OUSD's consortium model as historically weak.
- Jul 1, 20268Open USD Stablecoin Launches With Visa, Stripe, Coinbase Backing; Circle Stock Crashes 17%
Opinion timeline
Takes over time· 2 takes
- Wed, Jul 1Hot Take· 9
Open USD: Visa and BlackRock just told Circle what USDC is actually worth
Open USD Stablecoin Launches With Visa, Stripe, Coinbase Backing; Circle Stock Crashes 17%
Full summary & sources →The specific mechanism here is the revenue-sharing model. Open USD promises to pass the earnings from its reserves back to every business that participates — Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, Coinbase, 140 companies in total. That's the knife.
Circle built USDC into a $74 billion asset partly by keeping most of that reserve income itself. The new consortium is essentially saying: the real product isn't the stablecoin, it's the yield, and we're giving it away to buy distribution.
The analysts calling the 17% drop 'overblown' may well be right about Circle surviving. But the price collapse tells you what the market thinks Circle's moat actually was — and it turns out the moat was made of money it was keeping from partners who are now going elsewhere to get it.
- Sat, Jul 4First Take· 8
Open USD: a 'consortium' built on courtesy replies
BlackRock and Visa Back OUSD; Samsung and Korean Firms Dispute Membership Claims
Full summary & sources →Shinhan Bank told Open Standard it would "review" the proposal. An unnamed firm said it might "consider it if things go well." Both ended up listed as founding partners in a 149-member consortium backed, apparently, by Visa and BlackRock.
That's not a partnership list. That's a cold-call log dressed up as a coalition.
The revenue-sharing model may genuinely be interesting. But none of it matters if the 140 firms underpinning the whole pitch haven't actually agreed to anything. A stablecoin's credibility is its backing — and the backing just publicly disowned the project.
Sources · 2
- Circle shares tumble 18% on Open USD stablecoin launch before Thursday reboundcryptobriefing.com · T2
- Tech, Finance Titans Redraw Stablecoin Map in Threat to Circlebloomberg.com · T1