Interview with Circle's Chief Product Officer: Redefining Global Money Movement

marsbitPublished on 2026-02-09Last updated on 2026-02-09

Abstract

Interview with Nikhil Tandog, Chief Product Officer of Circle, on redefining global money movement. Circle has evolved from a stablecoin issuer to a full-stack platform with a three-layer strategy: core assets (USDC, EURC), payments (Circle Payment Network), and infrastructure (ARC). Despite challenges like the US banking crisis, USDC rebounded due to its recognized value, compliance (MiCA, Genius Act), and transparency. Operating on 28 blockchains with CCTP, USDC is global, with holders in 190 countries. Looking to 2030, Tandog envisions a future with efficient B2B payments ($59T market), AI-agent-driven M2M transactions, and programmable money integrated into software. Circle’s ARC infrastructure addresses scalability, payment finality, configurable privacy, and gas payment in stablecoins. The company continues expanding USDC, deepening CPN, and launching ARC to unlock global productivity.

Author: The Defiant

Compiled by: Plain Language Blockchain

In the traditional financial system, the cross-border flow of funds is like a marathon full of friction, with approximately $3 trillion perpetually in transit, becoming sunk costs that generate no returns. As blockchain technology and regulatory frameworks mature, stablecoins are moving from the periphery of the crypto world to the core of the global economy. This interview features an in-depth conversation with Circle's Chief Product Officer, Nikil Tandog. From the dual perspectives of a technology expert and a global observer, he reveals how Circle has evolved from a single stablecoin issuer into a full-stack platform company covering assets, payments, and infrastructure.

This article not only explores how USDC is rebuilding market confidence through a compliant path in the post-banking crisis era but also looks ahead to the financial landscape of 2030: by then, money will become a programmable primitive like electricity, AI agents will replace humans as the primary entities making payments, and a new legal framework codified by the Genius Act will pave the way for internet-scale fintech companies. This is a deep reflection on the liberation of productivity, economic inclusivity, and the vision of "money as code," providing a crucial footnote for understanding how wealth will move in the next decade.

I. From Issuer to Platform Company: Circle's Strategic Evolution and Core Logic

Host: We all know that USDC is Circle's flagship product and a mainstream representative of stablecoins. Under the current industry consensus, stablecoins have become the most successful entry point into cryptocurrency. Please talk about the core thesis driving Circle today. What is your main strategy, and how has it evolved from the early days?

Nikhil: Circle is a company with a 12- to 13-year history, and we have been deeply involved in the stablecoin space for a long time. USDC has been around for about 7 years. For a long time, stablecoins were not seen as a core use case for cryptocurrency. Back then, people were more inclined to build fully decentralized, self-sovereign money, and thought "uploading the US dollar to the internet" lacked imagination.

But when I joined the company, this was what excited me the most. Because globally, access to the US dollar is a "superpower." Having grown up in India, I deeply understand how much people outside the West value the US financial system and the dollar. Stablecoins are not just financial instruments; they are a solution for economic inclusion.

Our development has gone through several stages: First, we built one of the world's largest stablecoin networks. The value of a network lies in the willingness of both parties to transact. USDC succeeded because recipients were willing to accept it. By establishing numerous on/off-ramps, we embedded USDC into both the traditional crypto ecosystem and the modern payment ecosystem.

Second, Circle is transitioning from a single stablecoin issuer to a platform company with a "three-layer structure." This includes:

  1. Core Asset Layer: In addition to USDC, we also issue EURC (euro stablecoin) and USYC.

  2. Application & Payment Layer (CPN): The Circle Payment Network (CPN), which can be seen as an advanced application of stablecoins for handling actual payment needs.

  3. Infrastructure Layer (ARC): This is the underlying tech stack we are building to provide deeper technical support for stablecoins.

This evolution actually fulfills the vision our founder, Jeremy Allaire, had many years ago. We had to progress step by step to today, accumulating sufficient market share and trust, to truly begin building this complete platform architecture.

II. Resilient Growth Post-Crisis: The Compliant Path and the Impact of the Genius Act

Host: When the US banking crisis erupted last year, the circulation of USDC was impacted because some of the collateral was held in troubled banks. There was a crisis of confidence in the market at that time, but you successfully rebounded and resumed growth. Where did this growth momentum come from?

Nikhil: The growth came from the market's renewed recognition of the asset's value and functionality. In the core asset trading market, USDC is seen as more valuable than before. In payment systems, it has demonstrated stronger programmability and infrastructure support, which other stablecoins lack.

Currently, USDC runs on 28 public chains. We also operate the Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP), ensuring USDC can move seamlessly and securely across different chains. More importantly, we have invested heavily in regulatory infrastructure. We comply with the EU's MiCA regulations, and in the US, the Genius Act (assumed to be significant legislation in the 2026 context) has essentially codified Circle's compliant operating model into law.

People are beginning to realize that a stablecoin is not just a financial asset; it is a network. When you and I transact, we seek the asset with the highest liquidity, the most reliability, and 24/7/365 availability.

Host: Speaking of competition, Tether (USDT) is still the stablecoin with the largest circulation. The market generally believes that Circle follows a compliant and transparent path, while Tether operates in a relatively gray area. What does this positioning mean for you?

Nikhil: I won't speculate on the reserve structure of competitors. I can only say that Circle adheres to a path of transparency. We have the Circle Reserve Fund, publish daily checkpoints, and anyone can see where the funds are going. As a company preparing to go public (or already in the process), we undergo strict audits and financial reporting disclosures.

One of the purposes of pursuing a public listing is to make global users believe that we are not a secretive small operation but a modern financial institution with checks, balances, and regulation. We want sunlight to shine into every corner.

Regarding growth regions, although our primary market liquidity is currently concentrated in licensed countries, USDC has shown极强的 (extremely strong) global presence in secondary markets. Currently, there are USDC holders in about 190 countries worldwide. It's like an internet protocol: if you build an open, powerful API (i.e., USDC infrastructure), developers worldwide will build applications on it. We are committed to entering emerging markets like Latin America and Africa through the compliant "front door," working with local regulators to unleash local economic ambitions.

III. Towards 2030: AI Agents, Programmable Money, and a $59 Trillion Market

Host: With increasing regulatory clarity, especially the passage of the Genius Act you mentioned, has the willingness of institutional participants (like banks and fintech companies) changed?

Nikhil: The change is astonishing. Previously, for a fintech company to enter a market, it needed to establish local banking relationships, an extremely slow process. But stablecoins allow financial services to globalize using the scale effects of the internet, just like Netflix.

I have a private insight: on the first Monday after the Genius Act passed, I was in a meeting at the office with one of the largest US fintech companies. They were already making extremely complex plans for stablecoin integration.

Host: Looking ahead to 2030, what do you think the world will look like?

Nikhil: By 2030, the global financial landscape will undergo fundamental changes.

  1. Efficiency Revolution in B2B Markets: This is a massive market worth $59 trillion. Cross-border B2B payments will become extremely efficient through stablecoins.

  2. Machine-to-Machine (M2M) Payments: With the proliferation of AI agents, future network users will be more agents than humans. We need to redesign payment networks for these agents. Imagine, when my daughter goes to college, she might have five AI agents working for her. These agents could raise capital on-chain based on work history and income streams, completely bypassing the traditional bank loan model.

  3. Integration of Software and Payments: In the past, software and payments were separate. In the future, this boundary will disappear. Payment will be just a few lines of code in software, with极高的 (extremely high) programmability.

IV. ARC Infrastructure: Building the Financial Foundation for Internet Scale

Host: Since there are already many chains, why did Circle decide to build its own infrastructure layer, ARC? How is it different from solutions like Ethereum Layer 2?

Nikhil: This stems from our industry experience. In the Google era, when Android appeared, there were already six operating systems on the market, but the key to Android's success was building a complete ecosystem.

Current blockchain infrastructure still faces huge obstacles when it comes to "mainstream users going on-chain." For example, the cost of creating wallets for tens of millions of users is extremely high. We want to solve these practical pain points. ARC is not meant to exclude other chains. USDC will continue its multi-chain strategy, but ARC will serve as the underlying layer of our tech stack, providing the following features:

  • Payment Finality: Ensuring payments are irreversible in a very short time.

  • Configurable Privacy: Allowing transaction endpoints to control privacy levels, meeting corporate compliance needs.

  • Native Stablecoin Pays for Gas: Users do not need to hold a specific native token to pay fees, solving the complexity of corporate balance sheet management.

Host: Final question, in what areas do you think stablecoins are "not good at"? Or, where do traditional financial rails have more advantages?

Nikhil: That's an interesting question. But I find it hard to think of what stablecoins are not good at. It's like asking "what is electricity not good at" or "what is the internet not good at."

Some say domestic payments are already fast and don't need stablecoins. But the issue is programmability. A non-programmable real-time payment system is merely simple value transfer. Once you put it on-chain and赋予 (endow) it with programmability, it can support more complex business logic and automated processes. Stablecoins are a core underlying technology; like electricity, when you introduce it into a process, it usually makes it better.

Host: What exciting things will we see Circle launch in 2026?

Nikhil: We will continue to focus on the three pillars:

  1. Expanding the USDC Network: More chains, more features.

  2. Deepening CPN (Payment Network): Adding more partners, opening more cross-border payment routes.

  3. Officially Launching ARC: Completing our infrastructure stack.

We believe that by the end of this decade, this agent-based, programmable payment system will彻底释放 (completely unleash) global productivity.

Host: Thank you very much, Nikhil, for sharing. We will continue to follow the progress of Circle and ARC.

Related Questions

QWhat are the three layers of Circle's strategic evolution from a single stablecoin issuer to a platform company?

AThe three layers are: 1. The Core Asset Layer (including USDC, EURC, and USYC), 2. The Application and Payments Layer (Circle Payment Network - CPN), and 3. The Infrastructure Layer (ARC - the underlying tech stack being built).

QAccording to Nikhil, what was a key factor in USDC's recovery and growth following the US banking crisis?

AThe growth came from the market's renewed recognition of the asset's value and functionality. USDC was seen as more valuable in core asset trading markets and demonstrated stronger programmability and infrastructure support in payment systems, which other stablecoins lacked.

QHow does Nikhil describe the future role of AI agents in the financial landscape by 2030?

ABy 2030, AI agents will become the primary users of payment networks instead of humans. These agents will be able to raise capital on-chain based on work history and income streams, completely bypassing traditional bank loan models.

QWhat are the key features of the ARC infrastructure that Circle is building?

AKey features of ARC include: Payment Finality (ensuring payments are irreversible in a very short time), Configurable Privacy (allowing transaction endpoints to control privacy levels for corporate compliance), and the ability to pay Gas fees with native stablecoins (eliminating the need for businesses to hold specific native tokens for transaction fees).

QWhat is the significance of the 'Genius Act' mentioned in the interview for Circle and the stablecoin industry?

AThe Genius Act essentially codified Circle's compliant operating model into law. It provided regulatory clarity that significantly increased willingness from institutional participants like banks and fintech companies to integrate stablecoins, allowing financial services to achieve global scale using the internet's network effects.

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