ARK Invest Sells $146M in Circle Stock After 675% IPO Surge

TheCryptoTimes2025-06-21 tarihinde yayınlandı2025-06-21 tarihinde güncellendi

ARK Invest has sold another $146.3 million worth of Circle (CRCL) stock just two weeks after its recently launched IPO. The largest reduction came from the ARKK ETF, which sold 490,549 shares, or about 1.8% of the portfolio. Additional shares were offloaded from ARKW and ARKF, bringing the total number of shares sold to over 609,000.

This move comes as Circle’s jaw-dropping 675% surge in share price,  from its IPO listing at $31 to $240.28 per share. This IPO has been described as the most explosive public debut of any U.S. company raising $500 million or more since 1980. 

Despite the sell-off, ARK Invest, led by CEO Cathie Wood, still holds 2.52 million shares of Circle (8.31%), valued at $504.4 million. This makes Circle among the top holdings in ARK’s flagship ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK). After Circle, the second-largest holding becomes Tesla (TSLA) at $652.56 million (10.15% of the portfolio).

At the same time, ARK Invest is diversifying its portfolio by rotating into traditional tech leaders, adding shares of AMD, Shopify, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company across its ETFs.

Circle’s relevance in the crypto space remains strong. Its stablecoin, USDC, is the second-largest globally, with $61.26 billion in circulation, trailing only Tether’s USDT.  Meanwhile, Shopify has enabled USDC payments through Base, a Layer 2 Ethereum network, making it easier for merchants to accept crypto payments.

Also Read: Ark Invest sells $44.8M in Circle shares a day after $51.7M sale



İlgili Okumalar

Apple Sues OpenAI Sparking Feud, Musk Slams Altman for Fraud, Altman Retorts with 'Space Data Center' Boast

Apple Sues OpenAI as Musk-Altman Feud Escalates The public feud between Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman intensified, coinciding with their respective AI companies launching flagship models in the same week, highlighting fierce competition. On July 11, Musk posted on X, accusing Altman of taking "fraud to the next level" regarding OpenAI's commercial practices. Altman fired back, sarcastically suggesting Musk was the one selling "short-term space datacenter" concepts to public market investors. Musk countered with allegations that Altman "stole an open-source AI charity" and, amid Apple's recent lawsuit, "stole all of Apple's phone tech." He mockingly referenced Altman needing a "parole officer's" approval to travel. This exchange occurred against the backdrop of a significant legal development: Apple filed a lawsuit against OpenAI in a California federal court, alleging the AI company deliberately solicited Apple employees to leak confidential information on unreleased products to aid its own hardware plans. Apple demands OpenAI cease this activity, destroy proprietary materials, and redesign upcoming products. OpenAI responded, stating it has no interest in other companies' trade secrets and remains focused on innovation. This lawsuit could profoundly impact their two-year partnership where OpenAI provides key tech for Apple Intelligence and Siri. The rivalry extended to product releases. OpenAI launched GPT-5.6, while Musk's SpaceXAI unveiled Grok 4.5. Both are positioned as AI agents capable of multi-step tasks. GPT-5.6 is noted for strengths in broad reasoning, business workflows, and cybersecurity. Grok 4.5 is highlighted for higher efficiency in autonomous programming and developer workflows, with lower usage costs than GPT-5.6, though OpenAI's model reportedly still leads in areas like abstract reasoning. The differing strengths offer distinct choices for enterprises and developers based on their specific needs.

marsbit26 dk önce

Apple Sues OpenAI Sparking Feud, Musk Slams Altman for Fraud, Altman Retorts with 'Space Data Center' Boast

marsbit26 dk önce

Robinhood Chain's Success Proves Ethereum is Not Dead

Robinhood Chain's success demonstrates that Ethereum's L1+L2 model is thriving, not dying. Traditional crypto projects often focused on token sales and chose infrastructure to maximize token value. However, real-world businesses building cash-based products make different, pragmatic choices. When launching its chain, Robinhood chose Ethereum as its base layer and built a custom L2 using Arbitrum technology. It uses Ethereum blobs for data availability, ETH for gas, and relies on Ethereum for security. This mirrors Coinbase's earlier decision to build Base as an Ethereum L2. These are not ideological choices but sound business decisions driven by needs for security, liquidity, control, and predictable economics. The shift in the industry is from "token-centric" models to "cash business" models. Real companies serving broad user bases prioritize risk reduction, product improvement, and profit. For them, blockchain is infrastructure. The Ethereum L1+L2 "barbell" structure is ideal: the highly decentralized, neutral, and liquid L1 for settlement and security, combined with customizable, high-performance L2s for execution. This trend is positive for Ethereum and ETH. As more real businesses build on it, ETH becomes more integrated, distributed, and useful, strengthening its network effects and monetary premium. Robinhood's path—starting on an existing L2 and graduating to a dedicated one—is likely to become a standard playbook, proving the enduring utility of Ethereum's layered architecture for serious commercial adoption.

Odaily星球日报44 dk önce

Robinhood Chain's Success Proves Ethereum is Not Dead

Odaily星球日报44 dk önce

Tencent Heavily Invests in an IPO

"Tencent-Backed DPU Unicorn Leopard Cloud Intelligence Files for IPO on Shenzhen's ChiNext Board" Leopard Cloud Intelligence, a Shenzhen-based developer of Data Processing Unit (DPU) chips, has officially applied for an IPO on the ChiNext Board, aiming to become China's first publicly listed DPU company. Founded in August 2020 by Dr. Xiaoyang Xiao, a Stanford PhD graduate and serial entrepreneur who previously co-founded chip company RMI (acquired by Broadcom), the company focuses on the high-growth DPU sector. Its development accelerated following NVIDIA's formal introduction of the DPU concept in late 2020. The company has developed China's first high-performance, general-purpose programmable DPU SoC chip, boasting 400Gbps network bandwidth and claiming significant performance improvements and power savings over traditional solutions. Financially, Leopard Cloud's revenue grew exponentially from RMB 170,000 in 2023 to RMB 370 million in 2025, yet it remains unprofitable with substantial net losses. Its IPO application utilizes ChiNext's recently introduced fourth set of listing standards, which emphasize R&D and market valuation over short-term profitability. Tencent is the company's most significant backer and largest shareholder, holding a 19.78% stake after participating in multiple funding rounds. Other prominent investors include Sequoia Capital China, Shenzhen Capital Group, Five Dimensions Capital, and various government-guided funds from Shenzhen and Hangzhou. Pre-IPO, the company was valued at over RMB 14 billion. This listing is seen as a milestone for Shenzhen's semiconductor industry, complementing the recent successful IPO review of Yuexin Semiconductor (a Guangzhou-based wafer manufacturer) and signaling a wave of high-end hardware technology companies from the Greater Bay Area going public on the ChiNext Board.

marsbit1 saat önce

Tencent Heavily Invests in an IPO

marsbit1 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
活动图片