Is Circle Internet Stock a Millionaire Maker?

Key Points

Since its initial public offering (IPO) last month, Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) stock has skyrocketed 140% as excitement builds around the possibility that stablecoins could see widespread adoption across traditional finance. Considering the company issues USDC (CRYPTO: USDC) , one of the most popular stablecoins around, many investors believe Circle's stock is just getting started. So, could Circle Internet be a millionaire maker?

Stablecoins keep things steady

Stablecoins are a class of cryptocurrencies designed to hold their value relative to a traditional "fiat" currency -- often the U.S. dollar. Where coins like Bitcoin and Dogecoin are subject to dramatic swings in price, stablecoins are intended to never deviate more than a small fraction of a percent from the currency they are "pegged" to.

Though other crypto ventures have tried more complicated mechanisms, Circle maintains USDC's peg to the U.S. dollar by simply holding $1 in cash or short-term Treasury papers for every USDC it issues. Any USDC in circulation is redeemable at any time for $1 in cash.

So what is the point? USDC and other stablecoins provide many of the benefits of certain cryptocurrencies -- transactions are fast, cheap, and nearly frictionless -- without the fear of wild price swings. Like cash, they're intended to be used, not hoarded.

Circle's revenue comes from Treasuries

Despite the shiny technology exterior, Circle's revenue stream is simple. The company makes money through holding U.S. Treasuries. Circle, much like a bank, knows that only a fraction of all the USDC in circulation will be redeemed at any one time, so it only needs to keep a portion of reserves in cash to be instantaneously redeemable by USDC holders. It invests the rest in short-term U.S. Treasuries. That's still a relatively liquid asset, but one that earns Circle interest income.

This is functionally the entirety of Circle's revenue source; of the $1.68 billion revenues the company collected in 2024, $1.66 billion was from reserve interest. So, to be clear, Circle's revenue is directly tied to two main factors: how many USDC are in circulation (and therefore the size of the reserves from which it is earning interest) and U.S. Treasury rates.

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