
Circle CEO says Open USD must break USDC’s network effect before its 140 backers matter
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire used Open USD's launch to draw a harder line around USDC's moat: a partner-owned stablecoin can challenge Circle only if its distribution becomes live, regulated transaction flow. His July 1...
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Here is the latest from the digital-asset markets: Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire used Open USD's launch to draw a harder line around USDC's moat: a partner-owned stablecoin can challenge Circle only if its distribution becomes live, regulated transaction flow. His July 1 response followed Open Standard's June 30 announcement of Open USD. The launch post said more than 140 businesses had signed up to use the token, including Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, American Express, Coinbase, BlackRock, BNY, Google, Shopify, Solana, Base, Ripple and Fireblocks.
Open Standard said OUSD would offer no-cost minting and redemption at scale, send reserve earnings to partners after a management fee, and operate through an independent board made up of partners. Related Reading Visa Mastercard and Coinbase join Open USD as partner-led stablecoin increases DeFi yield war Open USD may turn stablecoin competition into a DeFi incentive war, with Plasma and other partners using shared economics to fight for user liquidity. Jul 1, 2026 Gino Matos The roster gives OUSD credible distribution.
Market Dynamics
Allaire's challenge is whether that distribution can become liquidity, regulated availability and repeat usage before USDC's incumbent rails absorb the demand. USDC's moat is measured in flow In his response, Allaire framed stablecoins as internet platform businesses that tend toward winner-take-most outcomes because liquidity, integrations, and regulatory access compound over time. He pointed to USDC's integrations, liquidity, licensing footprint, CCTP, and Gateway as the infrastructure that makes USDC easier for developers and institutions to continue using.
Allaire said, Stablecoin networks are platform and network effect businesses that are established over a long period of time, tend towards winner take most market structures, and resemble other internet platform utility markets. Establishing these liquidity network effects also involves building global regulatory infrastructure and ensuring that the stablecoin is available under various regimes around the world. Jeremy Allaire CEO Circle Share on View Profile Circle's own materials list native USDC support on 35 networks and cite its MiCA compliance and licensing disclosures, reinforcing that the incumbent's moat is operational as well as brand-driven.
Related Reading Circle adds $3 billion Wall Street Arc token risking an uncomfortable rivalry with Coinbase A longtime stablecoin partnership is entering a new phase as Circle seeks to own more of the infrastructure around USDC. May 12, 2026 Oluwapelumi Adejumo USDC's volume lead is large across several cuts, even though the measurement varies. Allaire cited Artemis data indicating USDC handled nearly $30 trillion in on-chain transactions in Q1 2026 and accounted for about 80% of dollar stablecoin blockchain transaction volume.
Market Impact
Circle's May 11 Q1 release separately reported $21. 5 trillion in USDC on-chain transaction volume, $77. 0 billion in USDC in circulation, and a 63% share of stablecoin transaction volume under Visa Onchain Analytics.
USDC also accounted for 80% of total stablecoin transaction volume in a CEX. IO Q1 stablecoin report, which found that bot-driven activity accounted for 76% of total stablecoin volume. Those cuts point to USDC's lead in measured on-chain dollar-token flow, while Open USD is still awaiting launch.
OUSD is attacking the economics around that position. Its pitch gives businesses no-cost minting and redemption at scale, shared reserve earnings and a collective governance model. Related Reading CLARITY Act stablecoin fight shifts from yield to who captures digital-dollar economics Washington’s stablecoin rules are turning a yield fight into a broader contest over payments, reserves, wallets, and bank rails.
This shift continues to shape the digital-asset landscape, with analysts examining its near-term effects.




