Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire responded to the June 30 launch announcement of Open USD by arguing that the new stablecoin's more than 140 backers will only matter if it generates live, regulated transaction volume.
Open Standard unveiled Open USD on June 30 as a partner-led stablecoin that offers no-cost minting and redemption while sharing reserve earnings with participants after a management fee. The token is operated through an independent board and is expected to launch later in 2026.
Allaire said liquidity, integrations and compliance, not logos, will decide whether Open USD can challenge USDC's network effects. He noted USDC handled nearly $30 trillion in on-chain transactions in Q1 2026 and maintains thousands of integrations plus regulatory approvals in markets including Europe and Japan.
Jefferies analysts warned against buying the dip in Circle shares after a 17 percent plunge, citing rising competition from bank- and fintech-issued stablecoins. ARK Invest’s Lorenzo Valente expressed skepticism that a consortium of more than 140 rivals can coordinate effectively or withstand regulatory pressure.