- Circle’s shares jumped as much as 14% after it disclosed a $222 million pre-sale for its ARC blockchain — valued at $3 billion — with investors including a16z’s crypto fund, BlackRock, Apollo Funds, and Intercontinental Exchange.
- Q1 net income from continuing operations fell 15% to $55 million as operating expenses and compensation rose; revenue and reserve income grew 20% to $694 million but missed analyst expectations of $720.8 million.
- USDC stablecoin circulation rose 28% year-over-year to $77 billion, though the reserve return rate fell to 3.5% (down 66 basis points) as the Fed’s rate environment weighs on the interest income that drives most of Circle’s profit.
- Adjusted EBITDA beat expectations at $151 million vs. the $137.9 million forecast, and analysts highlighted Circle’s positioning for AI agent commerce — where stablecoins are seen as the native settlement layer for machine-to-machine transactions.
What Happened?
Circle reported mixed Q1 results Monday evening — revenue missed, net income fell, and its reserve return rate compressed — but investors quickly looked past the headline numbers once the ARC blockchain pre-sale details emerged. Circle raised $222 million in a pre-sale for ARC, the native token attached to a new blockchain it’s building specifically to underpin stablecoin financial operations: cross-border payments, capital market settlements, and eventually AI agent commerce. The investor lineup — Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto fund, BlackRock, Apollo, and Intercontinental Exchange — signals institutional conviction in the project. The stock initially dipped on the earnings miss before reversing sharply higher.
Why It Matters?
The ARC pre-sale reframes Circle’s story from a stablecoin issuer living and dying by Fed interest rates into a potential infrastructure layer for the next generation of digital finance. USDC is already the second-largest stablecoin with $77 billion in circulation, but the reserve income model is inherently rate-sensitive — Circle’s return rate fell 66 basis points in Q1, and any further rate cuts would compress margins further. ARC and the AI agent commerce thesis offer a path to revenue that doesn’t depend on the Fed. CEO Jeremy Allaire has argued that stablecoins will become the native currency of machine-to-machine commerce as autonomous AI agents proliferate — and that Circle, with its full-stack approach (stablecoin + services + blockchain), is best positioned to be the default settlement layer for that future.
What’s Next?
The US stablecoin regulatory framework — signed into law last July — has given the sector legitimacy, and momentum is building toward a crypto market-structure bill (the Clarity Act) that Coinbase says is nearing Senate consideration. Circle shares its USDC revenue with Coinbase, making regulatory progress a shared tailwind. On the headwind side, rate cuts — which markets increasingly expect — would further compress Circle’s reserve income, and the Middle East conflict’s resolution (or not) will affect the macro environment for risk assets broadly. The ARC launch timeline and token economics will be the next major disclosure to watch for investors trying to assess whether the blockchain bet delivers revenue at scale.
Source: Bloomberg













