Author: Yishabei
July 10, 2026, Circle announced it received final approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to establish Circle National Trust (First National Digital Currency Bank, N.A.). This news quickly garnered market attention, with Circle's stock rising over 10% in pre-market trading.

This is a landmark event that marks the first time a stablecoin issuer has formally entered the core US financial regulatory system as a federal trust bank.
It signifies that stablecoin competition is upgrading from "who issues more coins, who complies better" to "who can control the federally regulated infrastructure for issuance, reserves, custody, and settlement."
1. What exactly is this license?
Circle National Trust is a national trust bank, not a commercial bank.
It cannot accept public deposits, make loans, and does not have traditional bank FDIC deposit insurance. Essentially, it is a trust institution directly supervised at the federal level by the OCC, with its core function being to provide fiduciary services, including digital asset custody.
According to Circle's official statement:
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Initial phase: Primarily providing digital asset custody services for Circle itself and related parties, with limited opening to institutional clients (banks, regulated derivatives institutions, etc.) as needed in the future.
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Reserve management: Explicitly listed as a "future capability" (planned as a future capability), not currently operational.
This is an adjustment from the initial vision when Circle applied in 2025. At that time, the market speculated that reserve management would also be placed within the federally regulated entity simultaneously. However, in the final approval, the OCC adopted a more prudent, phased approach—allowing the custody business to land first, with reserve management to follow later.
This "easier first, harder later" disaggregation strategy demonstrates Circle's precise grasp of the regulatory pace and reduces the complexity and uncertainty of a single approval.
2. Why is this license of immense value?
1. Gaining Federal Regulatory Credit Endorsement
Previously, USDC primarily relied on state money transmitter licenses and New York's BitLicense. With the establishment of Circle National Trust, its core custody business is directly under federal OCC supervision.
This is highly significant for institutional adoption of USDC. When banks, brokerages, payment companies, and asset management institutions evaluate using USDC, they often prioritize not technology, but regulatory certainty and clarity of the responsible entity. A federal regulatory entity provides a level of trust endorsement far superior to state-level licenses.
USDC is evolving from a "stablecoin issued by a crypto company" to "federally regulated US dollar settlement infrastructure."
2. Paves a Federal Pathway for Future Reserve Management
Although reserve management has not yet migrated to Circle National Trust, the license structure is prepared for it. Once conditions are ripe (further regulatory clarity, mature internal systems and risk controls), Circle can relatively smoothly incorporate USDC reserve management into the federal entity.
This means the entire chain of issuance—custody—reserve management for USDC has the opportunity to operate under higher regulatory standards in the future, further enhancing its credibility as "digital dollar" infrastructure.
3. Building Vertical Integration Capabilities for Stablecoins
Circle's long-term roadmap is becoming increasingly clear:
Issue USDC → Manage reserves → Custody assets → On-chain settlement → Cross-border payment network → Provide stablecoin infrastructure services to traditional financial institutions.
It did not choose to become a traditional commercial bank that takes deposits and creates credit. Instead, it chose the lighter, more stablecoin-business-focused trust bank model. This model aligns with the core characteristics of stablecoins ("full reserve, payment nature") while maximizing the institutional benefits brought by federal regulation.
3. What does this mean for the payment industry?
For payment institutions like Visa, Mastercard, and Stripe, Circle National Trust will not directly compete for acquiring business in the short term.
The change occurs at the underlying settlement layer:
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Merchants still receive payments via PSPs;
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PSPs can obtain USDC through Circle or partner banks;
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USDC is used for cross-border settlement, fund aggregation, merchant payouts, and other scenarios;
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Circle National Trust provides federally regulated custody (potentially including reserve management in the future);
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Traditional banks and payment institutions continue to handle fiat accounts, compliance access, local payment methods, and customer relationships.
This essentially strengthens the stablecoin settlement rail, rather than replacing the existing payment system. It grants stablecoins stronger regulatory compliance and institutional acceptance in cross-border payments, fund aggregation, real-time settlement, and other scenarios.
From a macro perspective, this is also a significant step in the evolution of stablecoins from "peripheral innovative tools" to "core financial infrastructure." In the future, a new competitive landscape and value distribution system will form around stablecoin issuance, custody, reserve management, and settlement networks.
4. The Competitive Landscape is Being Reshaped
After Circle obtained this license, other players are also accelerating their layouts:
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Coinbase, Paxos, and other stablecoin issuers are also applying for similar trust bank licenses;
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Stripe/Bridge, Ripple, and other payment and cross-border infrastructure players are also advancing related regulatory qualifications.
The competition is for who can control the issuance, custody, reserves, and settlement authority of the next generation of digital dollars.
Tether still primarily relies on state-level regulation, lagging significantly in federal-level license arrangements.
With this move, Circle has significantly widened its lead over major competitors in terms of regulatory moats.
5. Stablecoin Competition Enters a New Phase
The approval of Circle National Trust is an important institutional response by the US regulatory system to the "payment nature" and "infrastructure nature" of stablecoins.
It proves that for stablecoins to truly become global digital economy infrastructure, they must enter the highest-level regulatory framework and exist in a manner consistent with their business essence (trust bank, not commercial bank).
For Circle, this is a milestone victory from a decade of regulatory efforts and the starting point for greater ambitions in the future.
For the entire industry, the dimensions of stablecoin competition have fundamentally upgraded—from coin-issuance capability to infrastructure control capability.
Whoever can truly embed stablecoins into the federally regulated banking system is more likely to occupy key nodes in the next-generation US dollar settlement network.





