Circle Internet Group received final approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on July 8 to establish First National Digital Currency Bank, making it the first stablecoin issuer with a federal banking charter. The milestone arrived as Circle faces a more immediate test: the August 2026 renewal of its distribution agreement with Coinbase, under which it paid $908 million in 2024 — roughly 54% of total revenue — to keep USDC on the exchange's platform.
"The OCC charter cements USDC's status as the premier incumbent in a world of regulated stablecoins," Jasper Sneff-Nanni, managing principal at fintech consulting firm FS Vector, told American Banker. The approval places Circle's reserve management under direct federal supervision and grants federal preemption of state licensing requirements, creating a compliance barrier that analysts estimate would take competitors 18 to 24 months and more than $50 million to replicate.
The economics of the Coinbase partnership underscore the fragility beneath the regulatory achievement. Under the Collaboration Agreement that took effect Aug. 18, 2023, Coinbase earns 100% of the reserve interest on USDC held directly on its platform and 50% on USDC held elsewhere. That arrangement generated an estimated $1.35 billion in stablecoin-related revenue for Coinbase in 2025, according to projections cited in the agreement's disclosures. For Circle, the $908 million distribution cost consumed more than half of the $1.7 billion in total revenue it reported for 2024, leaving a narrow margin after operating expenses.
The August 2026 renewal window arrives with Coinbase holding significantly stronger negotiating leverage. On June 30, Coinbase publicly endorsed Open USD, a rival stablecoin backed by a consortium of more than 140 companies including Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, BlackRock and BNY. CRCL shares fell 17% that day. Open USD is designed to distribute nearly all reserve income directly to its consortium partners, directly attacking the interest income model that generated $653 million for Circle in the first quarter of 2026 alone — roughly 94% of total revenue.
What the OCC charter does and does not change
Circle National Trust is a national trust bank, not a full-service commercial bank. It cannot accept deposits from the public, make loans or offer checking accounts. No FDIC insurance attaches to the charter. At opening, the bank will provide exactly one service: fiduciary digital asset custody for Circle itself and its affiliates. The OCC's approved business plan allows for future expansion to institutional clients — banks, regulated financial firms and derivatives organizations — but that depends on demonstrated demand and additional regulatory approval.
The charter does give Circle something its competitors lack: federal preemption of state money transmitter licenses and a single regulatory regime under the OCC. For institutional counterparties — pension funds, banks and regulated asset managers — that federal supervision may be the difference between adopting USDC as settlement infrastructure or staying on the sidelines. Circle also holds regulatory licenses across the European Union, Singapore, Bermuda, Canada, the United Kingdom and Abu Dhabi.
CRCL shares surged as much as 16% intraday on the OCC news, briefly touching $72.85, before giving back more than half those gains by midday. The stock closed near $66 on July 10, well below its 50-day simple moving average of about $93 and its 200-day SMA of about $96. Analyst price targets range from $55 (Compass Point, Neutral) to $157 (Clear Street, Buy), with Mizuho at $85 (Neutral), Goldman Sachs at $96 (Neutral) and Susquehanna at $69 (Neutral).
The Open USD threat and the Coinbase leverage play
Open USD is not yet live — it is expected to launch later in 2026 on Solana — but its design targets the load-bearing wall of Circle's business model. Where Circle keeps the majority of reserve income after distribution costs, OUSD passes nearly all of it to consortium partners. Minting and redemption are free, with no volume caps. Governance sits with a board drawn from partner institutions rather than a single issuer.
The consortium model has precedent. Paxos' USDG, which distributes reserve income to partners, has gathered about $3 billion in supply since launching in late 2024 — against USDC's $73.2 billion. The arithmetic of conversion is daunting. But the threat is not primarily about supply; it is about Circle's relationship with Coinbase, which is simultaneously an OUSD founding partner and Circle's largest distribution channel.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire pushed back publicly, arguing that "large groups of large companies coordinate poorly, have misaligned incentives, slow things down and rarely create the space for real durable innovation." He said Circle's "stablecoin partnership with Coinbase remains as strong as ever." Dragonfly Capital's Rob Hadick noted that "consortiums are hard and they break easily."
The GENIUS Act's implementing rules are due from six federal agencies by July 18, 2026. If the agencies meet that deadline, the framework — which mandates 1:1 reserves, monthly independent audits and Bank Secrecy Act compliance — takes effect around mid-November. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has estimated stablecoin outstanding volume could grow tenfold to $3 trillion by 2030 from current levels around $311 billion. Circle just placed the largest available regulatory bet that being the most supervised name in the room is a competitive advantage. Whether that bet pays off depends on whether Coinbase renews on terms that do not materially shrink Circle's margins.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.