Open USD (OUSD), a new dollar stablecoin backed by more than 140 corporate partners, has launched as a coalition project.
The coalition includes financial institutions, crypto firms and at least one major distributor of Circle Internet Group’s USDC (NYSE:CRCL).
OUSD is structured so that more interest income from reserves is returned to participants than under the current USDC model.
Circle’s CEO has publicly questioned the consortium governance approach used for OUSD, referencing challenges Circle faced with similar structures in the past.
For investors tracking Circle Internet Group, the launch of OUSD puts fresh attention on how USDC earns money and shares economics with partners. USDC sits at the center of Circle’s business, and any new rival that adjusts who captures interest income on reserves can affect how attractive USDC is to distributors and institutions. The fact that Circle’s largest distributor is part of the OUSD group underlines how competitive relationships in stablecoins can shift quickly.
This development prompts a closer look at how Circle structures revenue sharing, incentives and partnerships around USDC. The OUSD launch highlights that stablecoin design choices, from governance to yield allocation, now sit at the core of Circle’s long term positioning and bargaining power with key industry players.
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NYSE:CRCL Earnings & Revenue Growth as at Jul 2026
The OUSD coalition puts direct pressure on how Circle Internet Group shares economics with the partners that distribute and hold USDC. By routing a larger share of interest income back to OUSD participants, the new model could appeal to institutions that currently help Circle scale USDC but might want a bigger share of reserve yield. That is particularly relevant given that Circle already pays out significant distribution costs and has seen its stock fall 17% following the OUSD news. With USDC at the core of Circle’s payments and tokenization plans, any shift in partner loyalty or bargaining power could influence how much of future stablecoin growth flows to Circle versus its ecosystem.
How This Fits Into The Circle Internet Group Narrative
The OUSD launch directly tests the part of the Circle Internet Group narrative that leans on growing institutional adoption of USDC for payments and tokenized capital markets, because it gives banks and payment firms another dollar stablecoin to plug into their systems.
The consortium model and higher partner yield share could challenge the assumption that Circle can keep expanding transaction and services revenue without materially reworking distribution economics or margins.
The existing narrative focuses on regulation, Arc and tokenized money market funds, but does not fully account for a large coalition backed rival that explicitly targets how reserve income is split between issuer and partners.
⚠️ If OUSD’s higher yield share convinces big USDC distributors such as Coinbase, banks or payment networks to shift flows, Circle Internet Group could face pressure on both USDC volumes and the economics it keeps on each dollar of reserves.
⚠️ The combination of a 17% share price fall after the OUSD announcement and recent removal from several Russell growth indices may increase volatility and reduce liquidity just as competition in stablecoins intensifies.
🎁 Circle’s criticism of consortium governance draws on its own Centre experience, and if coordination across 140 OUSD partners proves difficult, that could limit how quickly OUSD builds a functioning, global payment network.
🎁 Circle Internet Group’s recognition as Best Crypto Payments Infrastructure Provider highlights that it already operates live, regulated stablecoin rails, which may matter for institutions comparing the operational and regulatory track records of USDC versus a newer rival like OUSD or existing competitors such as Tether and PayPal USD.
What To Watch Going Forward
After this OUSD launch, focus on how Circle Internet Group adjusts its USDC partner economics, including any disclosed changes to distribution costs or revenue sharing with large platforms. Watch which chains and payment networks actually integrate OUSD at scale, and whether USDC volumes or onchain payment activity shift toward rival stablecoins. It is also worth tracking how regulators react to consortium issued stablecoins compared with single issuer models, because differences in oversight or capital rules could influence which structure institutions prefer over time.
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