OUSD's Impact on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: Not a Simple Negative, but a More Complex Competitive Reshuffle

链捕手Publicado em 2026-07-05Última atualização em 2026-07-05

Resumo

This article analyzes the impact of the newly announced stablecoin OUSD, backed by a consortium including Stripe, on major incumbents like Circle (USDC), Tether (USDT), and Paxos (USDG). For Circle, the announcement is not a simple negative. While the initial market reaction was rational, it's not a "death sentence." Circle retains deep liquidity, existing integrations, and first-mover advantage. A potential restructuring or termination of its exclusive revenue-sharing deal with Coinbase could even near-double its net income in the short term, providing more competitive flexibility. However, within the Stripe ecosystem, OUSD, with its strong engineering and product focus, could become the default choice, displacing USDC for new integrations. Circle must accelerate its own fintech product development and consider defensive M&A. OUSD does not directly threaten Tether's core markets, which focus on different distribution channels. Tether's market share may decline over time but within a significantly growing overall market. Paxos faces the greatest pressure. OUSD undermines the primary value proposition of its USDG stablecoin, and Paxos's regulatory advantages may erode as frameworks mature, posing a more existential challenge. This explains Paxos's recent strategic pivot towards brokerage-as-a-service. A fundamental unresolved issue for enterprise adoption remains: if issued by a Bridge-related entity, OUSD, like USDC, still represents a credit exposure to a non-investment-...

Author:@HadickM, Partner at Dragonfly

Compiled by: WuBlockchain

TL;DR:

  • The impact of OUSD on Circle is not purely negative. The market's reaction of a 15% to 20% drop in CRCL's stock price is somewhat reasonable, but this does not equate to a "death sentence" for Circle. Circle still possesses deep liquidity, existing integrations, and first-mover advantages. Particularly if the Coinbase partnership is restructured or terminated, net income could nearly double in the short term, granting Circle greater competitive freedom.
  • OUSD could become the default stablecoin choice within the Stripe ecosystem. Stripe has clear advantages in engineering, product development, and building payment tools. If OUSD can establish sufficiently deep liquidity, it may replace USDC as the preferred option for many Stripe partners and clients. However, for products already built on Circle's APIs, migration requires strong incentives and won't be driven solely by revenue share.
  • A core barrier to enterprise stablecoin adoption remains unresolved. If OUSD is issued by a Bridge-related entity, it essentially remains a credit exposure to the issuer, and neither Circle nor Bridge are currently investment-grade credit entities. Unless Stripe or other alliance members provide parent-company guarantees, large banks and asset managers entering the market could still compete for the largest and most profitable enterprise use cases.
  • Circle needs to accelerate its payment and fintech product development and consider more proactive defensive M&A. OUSD won't be the last new competitor, so Circle needs to respond more actively in product, distribution, and ecosystem partnerships.
  • For Tether, OUSD does not directly impact its core market. Tether will continue focusing on distribution channels not prioritized by Stripe and Circle. Although its market share may decline over time, the overall stablecoin market size is still expected to grow.
  • Compared to Circle and Tether, Paxos may face greater pressure. OUSD could undermine the main selling point of USDG, and as regulatory frameworks mature, Paxos's regulatory advantage could also be diminished. Thus, this project poses a challenge closer to an existential threat for Paxos.

I believe the correct interpretation of OUSD is actually quite nuanced. It involves not only what OUSD means for stablecoin issuers like Circle, Tether, and Paxos respectively but also relates to the broader adoption prospects for stablecoins and the likelihood of this new project's ultimate success.

First, let's talk about CRCL. I'm not sure if it's just a coincidence: the OUSD announcement was made just as Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire was speaking at Goldman's largest and most talked-about digital assets conference ever. Jeremy, Goldman, and many in the audience clearly knew the news would be released pre-market and that it would negatively impact the stock price. That alone may not signify much, but it's certainly interesting, as people were already discussing it when he gave the interview, and CRCL opened down about 6% during his remarks.

From a business impact perspective, the market has long understood that the revenue share stablecoin issuers give to distribution partners would continue to increase, and redemption fees in payment scenarios must also be phased out. Circle has already been responding to these trends: on one hand, partnering with payment companies on minting and redemption, and on the other, engaging in revenue-sharing arrangements with distribution partners.

The potential restructuring or termination of the Coinbase partnership has also been hinted at for some time. If this happens, Circle's net income would immediately nearly double, which is very positive for the company. Of course, within a reasonable timeframe, much of these gains would likely flow to new distribution partners due to competition. However, Circle would also be freed from the constraints of the Coinbase agreement, allowing it to compete more aggressively in ways it couldn't before. Therefore, even if the proportion of net income Circle can retain continues to face pressure, the restructuring or cancellation of the Coinbase agreement itself might not be bad; it could actually be a net positive.

Additionally, Circle's existing deep liquidity is difficult to replicate and hard to quickly integrate into other systems. This should not be easily overlooked or dismissed as irrelevant.

However, it's clear that for many Stripe partners, customers, and ecosystem participants, as long as OUSD can establish sufficiently deep liquidity, it will likely replace the previously favored USDC as the default stablecoin used. It's undeniable that Stripe is a stronger engineering and product organization and is more likely to develop the supporting products and tools needed for stablecoin usability and distribution.

On the other hand, Circle still has clear first-mover advantages and existing integrations, which should also not be ignored. Switching costs might not be high, but if a product is already built on Circle's APIs, significant incentives are needed to migrate. This is harder than many imagine and won't simply depend on revenue share.

Of course, the truly bigger opportunity lies in the underserved greenfield market. For these new scenarios, OUSD's appeal might be stronger. But for non-payment scenarios or payment companies that compete with or have different incentive structures from Stripe, it's currently unclear whether OUSD will definitely be superior to existing stablecoins or future new options.

Finally, if OUSD is ultimately issued by a Bridge-related entity, it does not solve a core issue USDC faces when trying to deeply penetrate the enterprise market: these tokens essentially remain credit exposures to the issuing entity, and neither Circle nor Bridge are currently investment-grade credit entities. Bridge is also not yet ready to meet the compliance requirements of the GENIUS Act, though it is making progress on this front.

The situation would be different if Stripe's parent company or other alliance members provided parent-company guarantees. But both Circle and Bridge still face the risk of large banks and asset management companies entering the market and capturing the largest and most lucrative use cases. Meanwhile, there remains a huge amount of work in global licensing. Therefore, I don't believe the OUSD announcement alters this existing competitive risk.

Overall, the day before the OUSD announcement, I told someone I expected CRCL to fall 15% to 20% that day, and the drop indeed landed in the middle of that range. I think the market reaction was reasonable, but I don't see it as the "death sentence" for Circle that many commentators described.

Circle does need to accelerate its payment and fintech product development and also consider acquisitions more actively. As the stock price has fallen, this window may have partially closed, but there are still some interesting options in the market for it to explore, and some of these deals could still be accretive. New competitors won't stop at OUSD, so Circle needs to make some defensive moves.

For Tether, OUSD isn't targeting its core market. Tether will continue focusing on distribution channels not prioritized by Stripe and Circle, so it shouldn't be significantly affected. However, as Paolo Ardoino said on stage at Token 2049 a few years ago, Tether's market share may continue to decline over time, but this would happen in a market whose overall size is growing substantially.

In comparison, Paxos faces greater pressure. OUSD could undermine the main current advantage of USDG, and as regulatory frameworks gradually mature, Paxos might also lose its relative regulatory advantage. Compared to Circle and Tether, I believe OUSD's impact on Paxos is closer to an existential challenge. However, this also explains why Paxos refocused on brokerage-as-a-service business over the past year.

Perguntas relacionadas

QHow did the market react to the OUSD announcement regarding Circle's stock (CRCL), and does the author view this as a justified response?

AThe market reacted with a drop in CRCL's price between 15% to 20% on the day of the OUSD announcement. The author believes this market reaction was justified as it reflected the new competitive pressure, but strongly disagrees with interpretations that this signals a 'death sentence' for Circle.

QWhat are the potential benefits for Circle if its partnership agreement with Coinbase is restructured or terminated?

AIf the Coinbase partnership is restructured or terminated, Circle's net revenue could almost double immediately. While this revenue may gradually flow to new distribution partners over time, Circle would also be freed from the constraints of the Coinbase agreement, allowing it to compete more aggressively in ways it couldn't before, which could be a net positive development.

QWhy could OUSD become the default stablecoin choice within the Stripe ecosystem, and what major challenge remains for its enterprise adoption?

AOUSD could become the default choice within Stripe's ecosystem because Stripe possesses superior engineering and product capabilities, making it more likely to build the necessary tools for stablecoin usability and distribution. However, a major challenge for enterprise adoption remains: if OUSD is issued by a Bridge-related entity, it still represents a credit exposure to the issuer. Neither Circle nor Bridge are investment-grade credit entities, which is a core barrier for large enterprises and financial institutions.

QAccording to the author, how is Tether likely to be affected by the introduction of OUSD?

AThe author states that OUSD does not directly target Tether's core market. Tether will continue to focus on distribution channels that neither Stripe nor Circle prioritize. Therefore, Tether should not be significantly impacted, though its market share may continue to decline gradually within a market that is expected to grow substantially overall.

QWhich stablecoin issuer faces the most significant threat from OUSD, according to the analysis, and why?

APaxos faces the most significant pressure and a challenge closer to an existential threat. OUSD undermines the key selling points of Paxos's USDG stablecoin. Furthermore, as regulatory frameworks mature, Paxos's relative regulatory advantage may also erode. This explains why Paxos has shifted its focus back to its brokerage-as-a-service business over the past year.

Leituras Relacionadas

MSTR Discloses Sale of 3,588 Bitcoins, Stock Price Drops Over 5% at One Point During Trading

MicroStrategy, the world's largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, has significantly shifted its business model. Between June 29 and July 5, the company sold 3,588 bitcoins for approximately $216 million to fund quarterly dividends for its preferred stock. This marks its largest-ever Bitcoin sale and signals a strategic pivot: Bitcoin is transitioning from a "buy-and-hold" reserve asset to a liquidity management tool for the company. This move follows a recent authorization allowing Bitcoin sales when equity fundraising is less attractive. The announcement contributed to a more than 5% intraday drop in MicroStrategy's stock price, while Bitcoin fell to around $61,800—below the company's average holding cost of roughly $75,700. The sale represents a major departure from MicroStrategy's long-standing "never sell" commitment, which saw its first minor breach in May with a $2.5 million sale. The latest, hundred-times-larger transaction underscores growing financial pressures. Analysts note the company faces about $1.5 billion in annual preferred dividend obligations, far exceeding cash flow from its software business. As of July 5, MicroStrategy holds 843,775 bitcoins. Its current operational logic involves buying Bitcoin during favorable financing conditions and selling portions to cover dividends when needed, creating a flexible capital management cycle amidst a challenging market environment.

华尔街日报Há 2h

MSTR Discloses Sale of 3,588 Bitcoins, Stock Price Drops Over 5% at One Point During Trading

华尔街日报Há 2h

Q-Day Countdown: Will Quantum Computing End Cryptocurrencies?

Quantum Computing's Threat to Cryptocurrency: A Countdown to Q-Day Quantum computing, specifically Shor's algorithm, poses a fundamental threat to the public-key cryptography (e.g., ECDSA, RSA) that secures blockchain networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum. This critical juncture, known as Q-Day, is estimated to occur potentially within the next 5-15 years. The core vulnerability stems from the public and immutable nature of blockchains. Assets in addresses where the public key is already exposed on-chain (e.g., spent outputs) are at direct risk, as a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could derive the private key. This threatens the very trust model of cryptocurrencies. The response lies in Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC)—algorithms like lattice-based ML-DSA and hash-based SLH-DSA, which are resistant to quantum attacks. NIST has standardized key PQC algorithms (FIPS 203, 204, 205), providing a migration path. However, the primary challenge is not technical but socio-economic and involves complex governance: * **Bitcoin's** path is constrained by its conservative ethos. Migrating requires a soft-fork to new address types, facing hurdles like significantly larger signature sizes and, most critically, the divisive governance question of how to handle at-risk legacy UTXOs without violating core principles. * **Ethereum** is pursuing a "cryptographic agility" strategy, with a multi-layered roadmap. It leverages account abstraction for user accounts and is developing compressed hash-based signatures (e.g., leanXMSS) for its consensus layer, aiming for a full-stack upgrade over time. In conclusion, quantum computing does not spell an instant end for cryptocurrency but initiates a critical countdown. The industry has a limited "engineering comfort window" to orchestrate a coordinated, ecosystem-wide migration to PQC. The ultimate bottlenecks are the immense coordination efforts and governance decisions required for this foundational transition.

marsbitHá 3h

Q-Day Countdown: Will Quantum Computing End Cryptocurrencies?

marsbitHá 3h

Trump, the President Who Knows Best How to 'Trade Stocks'

Former US President Donald Trump reported a record-breaking $2.2 billion in personal income for 2025, the highest annual income ever disclosed by a sitting president. This figure, from a 927-page government ethics filing, represented a 3.5-fold increase from his $600 million income in 2024 and boosted his net worth to $6.5 billion. The primary drivers were cryptocurrency (64% of income, approximately $1.4 billion) and real estate (26%, approximately $575 million). His crypto earnings stemmed largely from the launch of his personal meme coin, $TRUMP, generating over $600 million in licensing fees, and substantial profits from the WLFI token and its parent company. Despite a sluggish property market, his Mar-a-Lago resort and associated golf clubs saw revenue surges of 50% and 27%, respectively, attributed to their use as venues for presidential events. Trump's financial disclosure also revealed an unprecedented level of stock market activity, with over 22,000 trades executed in 2025, averaging 87 trades per market day. Media analyses noted several instances where significant trading coincided with major policy announcements, such as proposed tariffs, raising questions about potential conflicts of interest. While the White House stated these trades were handled by a family-managed trust fund and not Trump directly, critics highlighted this as a departure from the blind trusts traditionally used by presidents post-Watergate. The report has intensified debate over the commercialization of the presidency. Supporters view it as a success story of a businessman-president, while critics argue it demonstrates an unprecedented conversion of public influence into private wealth, with policy decisions potentially linked to personal financial gains. The controversy centers on whether Trump's earnings represent innovative entrepreneurship or a fundamental conflict of interest, sparking renewed calls for stricter ethics reforms in US governance.

marsbitHá 4h

Trump, the President Who Knows Best How to 'Trade Stocks'

marsbitHá 4h

Countdown to Q-Day: Will Quantum Computing End Cryptocurrencies?

The article explores the existential threat quantum computing poses to cryptocurrencies and the urgent need for "post-quantum" migration. It outlines that quantum computers, through Shor's algorithm, could break the elliptic-curve cryptography (ECC) underlying blockchain security, potentially allowing private keys to be derived from public keys. The core challenge is not a lack of post-quantum cryptography (PQC) standards—like NIST's ML-KEM and ML-DSA—but the immense complexity of upgrading entire ecosystems before "Q-Day" (when quantum computers become capable of such attacks, estimated around 2035-2045). Key points include: * **Bitcoin's** risk is concentrated in legacy UTXOs with exposed public keys (e.g., early P2PK outputs). Migration faces massive hurdles: PQC signatures are much larger, increasing transaction size and cost, and the governance dilemma of handling un-migrated assets threatens its "code is law" ethos. * **Ethereum's** strategy focuses on "cryptographic agility," using Account Abstraction for user accounts and developing compressed hash-based signatures (like leanXMSS with SNARK aggregation) for consensus. Its migration is a complex, full-stack overhaul of execution, consensus, and data layers. * The "security debt" is enormous. The comfortable engineering window for a coordinated, ecosystem-wide upgrade is only 5-8 years. High-value infrastructure (exchanges, bridges) may face pressure before mainnet protocols. In conclusion, quantum computing is not an instant "doomsday" event but a forcing function for systemic change. Bitcoin's ultimate test is social consensus and property rights governance, while Ethereum's is technical complexity. Failure to migrate in time could lead to a fundamental re-pricing of crypto assets.

链捕手Há 4h

Countdown to Q-Day: Will Quantum Computing End Cryptocurrencies?

链捕手Há 4h

Trading

Spot
活动图片