Key Highlights
- Circle’s CRCL stock fell ~18% intraday, wiping out recent gains.
- Leak suggests a ban on passive yield for stablecoins like USDC.
- The policy shift could directly hit Circle’s revenue model tied to reserves and yield distribution.
Circle Internet Group (CRCL) stock tumbled 18% on Tuesday as investors reacted to reports that the latest Senate CLARITY Act compromise would sharply restrict how crypto platforms can offer rewards on stablecoins. Market reaction was immediate.
The stock, which had been trading above $130 levels, saw a steep sell-off, with a long red candle as the price dropped to $104.22 at last check after opening at $126.80 and hitting an intraday low of $103.24.
The selloff followed fresh reporting around draft legislative language on stablecoin yield. According to reports citing an internal stakeholder email, the proposal would prohibit platforms from offering yield “directly or indirectly” for holding a stablecoin, or in any way that is “economically or functionally equivalent” to bank interest.
What the leak suggests
According to circulating details, the restriction would apply across digital asset service providers, including exchanges, brokers, and affiliated entities. This directly impacts products tied to yield-bearing reserves, particularly those linked to USD Coin.
The reported text does not appear to ban every form of incentive. Activity-based rewards tied to promotions, subscriptions, payments, transfers, or platform use would still be allowed, provided they are not treated as equivalent to deposit interest. The draft would also leave it to the SEC, CFTC, and Treasury to further define what qualifies as a permissible reward and to write anti-evasion rules within a year of enactment.
Why does this hit Circle the hardest
Circle’s reserve income rose to $733 million in the fourth quarter, pushing CLCR price 30% as USDC circulation climbed 72% year over year to $75.3 billion, underscoring how closely the company’s growth story is tied to USDC’s scale and regulatory treatment.
The policy fight has been building for weeks. In early February, stablecoin interest and rewards had become the main sticking point in Senate negotiations, with banks pushing for tighter limits and crypto firms arguing that rewards are important for user acquisition and competition. Tuesday’s stock move suggests traders now see the latest draft as leaning toward a tougher interpretation of those limits.
- Reduce product attractiveness for users seeking returns
- Limit future stablecoin design innovations
- Pressure institutional adoption tied to yield strategies
Unlike decentralized stablecoins, Circle operates within a regulated framework, making it more exposed to direct policy enforcement.
What comes next
The reported draft remains unconfirmed in its final form, but the market reaction signals how sensitive crypto-linked equities are to regulatory headlines rather than finalized law.
If the provision survives legislative negotiations, it could reshape the stablecoin economics in the U.S. The institutional demand for yield-bearing digital dollars will be controlled by banks, and competitive dynamics between banks and crypto issuers would be changed.
For now, Circle’s sharp decline underscores a simple reality: policy risk is becoming the dominant driver of crypto equity valuations.
Also Read: US CLARITY Act Targets Stablecoin Yield, Allows Activity-Based Rewards
