Can Circle Defend Its Stablecoin Lead Against OpenUSD? Experts Weigh InCircle is facing one of its biggest challenges following the announcement of Open USD (OUSD), a new stablecoin backed by major financial and payments companies, including Visa, Mastercard, American Express, BlackRock, and Coinbase.
As speculation grew over what the new initiative could mean for USDC, Circle’s stock came under pressure. It has fallen about 12.7% over the past five trading days.
While incumbents still control the vast majority of the market, industry experts believe OUSD could significantly reshape the competitive landscape.
OUSD vs. USDC
In a conversation with CryptoPotato, Alex Witt, General Partner at Verda Ventures, said that “distribution is king” and value will accrue to built-in distribution networks. He explained,
“Circle, unlike Tether, does not own its primary distribution channels, as evidenced by Circle sharing 90% of USDC reserve yield with Hyperliquid, demonstrating its weak competitive position.”
As a result, Witt believes OUSD could “dramatically erode” the company’s first-mover advantage.
Meanwhile, Trace Finance co-founder and CEO Bernardo Brites described Open USD as “a real structural break” in the stablecoin market.
He said markets read the announcement as a direct threat to Circle, but also noted that skeptics have flagged real execution risks, including bootstrapping liquidity from zero, the lack of trading pairs against major crypto assets, governance friction from coordinating many stakeholders, and a thin fee model that could leave OUSD under-resourced.
Even so, Brites argued that Open USD’s consortium is “bigger than anything the USDG consortium assembled,” referring to the consortium behind Paxos-issued USDG.
“Getting the major card networks, processors like Adyen, and banks like BNY and Cross River behind a single stablecoin is unprecedented. Distribution has always been the hardest problem in stablecoins, and OUSD is launching with more of it than any issuer before.”
Allaire: OUSD’s Model Could ‘Starve an Infrastructure’
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire, however, pushed back against many of the arguments made in favor of the new stablecoin. In a tweet, Allaire said that stablecoin networks are platform and network effect businesses that tend towards “winner-take-most market structures,” while suggesting that years of network building matter more than newly announced consortia.
Responding to OUSD’s revenue-sharing model, the exec said Circle already shares the majority of its income with distribution partners, and added that “giving away all the income is a recipe for starving an infrastructure.” He also remains skeptical of OUSD’s governance model and argued that the track record of consortium products achieving scale, product-market fit, or even basic product agility is “absolutely dismal.”
“We actually tried this in the early days of USDC, and even with a very small group, ran into endless challenges and complexity.”
While acknowledging the new entrant, Allaire said Circle’s partnership with Coinbase “remains as strong as ever” and went on to say that he expects many of OUSD’s founding members to remain USDC partners and customers.
The post Can Circle Defend Its Stablecoin Lead Against OpenUSD? Experts Weigh In appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full story
Circle is facing one of its biggest challenges following the announcement of Open USD (OUSD), a new stablecoin backed by major financial and payments companies, including Visa, Mastercard, American Express, BlackRock, and Coinbase.
As speculation grew over what the new initiative could mean for USDC, Circle’s stock came under pressure. It has fallen about 12.7% over the past five trading days.
While incumbents still control the vast majority of the market, industry experts believe OUSD could significantly reshape the competitive landscape.
OUSD vs. USDC
In a conversation with CryptoPotato, Alex Witt, General Partner at Verda Ventures, said that “distribution is king” and value will accrue to built-in distribution networks. He explained,
“Circle, unlike Tether, does not own its primary distribution channels, as evidenced by Circle sharing 90% of USDC reserve yield with Hyperliquid, demonstrating its weak competitive position.”
As a result, Witt believes OUSD could “dramatically erode” the company’s first-mover advantage.
Meanwhile, Trace Finance co-founder and CEO Bernardo Brites described Open USD as “a real structural break” in the stablecoin market.
He said markets read the announcement as a direct threat to Circle, but also noted that skeptics have flagged real execution risks, including bootstrapping liquidity from zero, the lack of trading pairs against major crypto assets, governance friction from coordinating many stakeholders, and a thin fee model that could leave OUSD under-resourced.
Even so, Brites argued that Open USD’s consortium is “bigger than anything the USDG consortium assembled,” referring to the consortium behind Paxos-issued USDG.
“Getting the major card networks, processors like Adyen, and banks like BNY and Cross River behind a single stablecoin is unprecedented. Distribution has always been the hardest problem in stablecoins, and OUSD is launching with more of it than any issuer before.”
Allaire: OUSD’s Model Could ‘Starve an Infrastructure’
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire, however, pushed back against many of the arguments made in favor of the new stablecoin. In a tweet, Allaire said that stablecoin networks are platform and network effect businesses that tend towards “winner-take-most market structures,” while suggesting that years of network building matter more than newly announced consortia.
Responding to OUSD’s revenue-sharing model, the exec said Circle already shares the majority of its income with distribution partners, and added that “giving away all the income is a recipe for starving an infrastructure.” He also remains skeptical of OUSD’s governance model and argued that the track record of consortium products achieving scale, product-market fit, or even basic product agility is “absolutely dismal.”
“We actually tried this in the early days of USDC, and even with a very small group, ran into endless challenges and complexity.”
While acknowledging the new entrant, Allaire said Circle’s partnership with Coinbase “remains as strong as ever” and went on to say that he expects many of OUSD’s founding members to remain USDC partners and customers.
The post Can Circle Defend Its Stablecoin Lead Against OpenUSD? Experts Weigh In appeared first on CryptoPotato.
read the full storyWill Markets React When $2 Billion Bitcoin Options Expire Today?
Friday is upon us again, and with it the first Bitcoin options expiry event of the second half of…
Ireland’s CAB Cracks Third Bitcoin Wallet, Recovers $31 Million From Cannabis Grower
Ireland’s Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB) reportedly pulled another 500 bitcoin out of a…
Riot Platforms moves another 500 BTC to NYDIG custody
Riot Platforms moved 500 BTC to NYDIG custody, raising sale speculation as Bitcoin miners keep…
Clifton Collins Bitcoin stash shrinks after new 500 BTC seizure
Irish authorities recovered another 500 BTC from Clifton Collins’ lost drug stash, bringing total…
US Bitcoin ATM Count Drops 96% of Global Losses in First Half of 2026
Bitcoin ATMs are vanishing from American streets fast. The United States accounted for 96% of the…
Bitcoin Dominance Tests Key Support: Is the Long-Awaited Altcoin Season Finally Near?
Bitcoin dominance tests 58% support as extreme fear grips crypto. A breakdown to 55.5% could spark…
Legendary Trader John Bollinger Spots Possible Double-Bottom Signal for Bitcoin Recovery
TL;DR: Technical trader John Bollinger identified a fractal “W” pattern on Bitcoin…
John Bollinger Doubts Bitcoin’s W Pattern Can Break Weeks-Long Downtrend
Bitcoin’s been stuck. Weeks of grinding lower, and the bulls can’t seem to catch a break…
Strategy will be ‘less important’ in Bitcoin after STRC incident: Bitwise
Bitwise’s Matt Hougan said Strategy's STRC offer of high yields and low volatility was always a…
Bitcoin ETFs Bleed $8.95 Billion in Two Months, and the Selling Isn’t Over
Bitcoin ETF outflows reach $8.95 billion in two months. Glassnode data shows why the sell-off may…
Experts Say June $4.5B ETF Exit Reflects Macro Shift, Not Bitcoin Weakness
Spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds experienced a record $4.5 billion in net outflows in June,…
Bitcoin holds $61K after US jobs data report, AI sector weakness: Did BTC bottom?
Bitcoin bulls may make a run on $70,000 after weak US jobs data eased rate hike fears and capital…
John Doe 33 Steps Into Court to Fight $200 Billion Bitcoin Claim Tied to Satoshi’s Wallets
A mystery figure has walked into one of the most bizarre crypto legal fights in recent memory.…
Is Bitcoin heading for $65K? Sharplink buys $16M ETH: Market Moves
Analysts are divided on Bitcoin's next move, but there's some hope at last. Meanwhile, SharpLink has…
US Accounts for 96% of Global Bitcoin ATM Reductions in First Half of 2026
US Accounts for 96% of Global Bitcoin ATM Reductions in First Half of 2026 — what the latest…
Why Bitcoin Jumped towards $62,000 and What Could Carry It to $70,000
Bitcoin jumped towards $62,000 on weak US jobs data, dovish Fed signals, and heavy short…
Why Bitwise’s Matt Hougan Thinks Strategy’s Bitcoin Era Is Fading
Strategy's importance to Bitcoin is likely to diminish next cycle as institutional investors emerge…
U.S. Public Firm K Wave Media Liquidates Entire 88 BTC Portfolio to Repay Debt
U.S. Public Firm K Wave Media Liquidates Entire 88 BTC Portfolio to Repay Debt — what the latest…