OpenUSD Stablecoin Alliance Under Scrutiny Over Partner Misrepresentation Claims
The OpenUSD stablecoin consortium faced scrutiny over claims that it misrepresented its partnership roster, with Samsung, Dunamu, and Upbit disputing being listed as members without official consultation. Additional reporting alleged the consortium inaccurately represented the composition of its 149 backers, raising transparency concerns about the alliance.
Story timeline · 5 days
Latest: Additional coverage confirmed OpenUSD misrepresented its partner mix, with scrutiny extending beyond Samsung's dispute to the broader claimed 149-member coalition's accuracy.
Story timeline · 5 days
- Jul 5, 20265· this storyOpenUSD Stablecoin Alliance Under Scrutiny Over Partner Misrepresentation Claims
- 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, 20267Tech and Finance Firms Redraw Stablecoin Map; Circle Shares Fall 18% on Open USD Launch Before Rebound
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.
- 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 · 1
- OpenUSD’s partner mix-up puts its stablecoin alliance under scrutinycryptoslate.com · T2