
Circle Internet Group (NYSE:CRCL) executives highlighted rapid growth in USDC circulation and transaction activity, expanding product lines, and improving profitability during the company’s Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings call. Management also spent significant time outlining how stablecoins, blockchains, and artificial intelligence could converge to accelerate “agentic” (autonomous software-driven) commerce and payments.
USDC growth and network activity
CEO Jeremy Allaire said Circle ended the year with roughly $75 billion of USDC in circulation, up 72% year-over-year, despite “some of the declines that we saw in Q4 due to the crypto market correction.” Allaire added that on-chain USDC volume reached nearly $12 trillion, representing 247% year-over-year growth.
Allaire emphasized interoperability as a strategic focus, noting Circle supports USDC on over 30 blockchain networks. He said Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) volume grew 3.7x year-over-year to over $41 billion in Q4, and that CCTP accounted for “nearly all” USDC cross-chain traffic. He added that Circle tracked CCTP at more than 50% of all bridged volume across assets, reaching 62% in January.
Q4 financial results and key drivers
Circle reported $770 million in Q4 total revenue and reserve income, up 77% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA was $167 million, up 412%, with an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 54%.
Fox-Geen said the reserve return rate was 3.81% in Q4, down 68 basis points year-over-year due to a decline in SOFR. Total distribution, transaction, and other costs increased 52% year-over-year to $461 million. He also reminded listeners that Q4 2024 distribution costs included a previously disclosed $60 million one-time payment to a large distribution partner.
Other revenue rose to $37 million in Q4, including $24.7 million in subscription and services revenue and $12.2 million in transaction revenue. Fox-Geen said transaction revenue was primarily driven by blockchain rewards, including increased revenues from Circle’s role running a “super validator” on the Canton Network, as Canton Coin began trading during the quarter.
Platform expansion: Arc, CPN, StableFX, and additional digital assets
Circle described progress across what Allaire characterized as three platform pillars: developer infrastructure (including Arc), digital assets and services (including USDC, EURC, USYC, Mint and xReserve), and applications (including Circle Payments Network and StableFX).
- Arc: Allaire said Circle launched the Arc testnet in Q4 and described it as designed for “agentic economic activity.” He said more than 100 companies were participating in testnet activity, with “near 100% uptime,” average settlement finality of about half a second, and 166 million total transactions to date, averaging around 2.3 million daily transactions in the testnet environment. In prepared remarks, Allaire said Circle was on track to launch Arc mainnet in 2026. During Q&A, he outlined a plan to begin mainnet with a proof-of-authority validation model involving strategic partners running infrastructure. He also said Circle continues exploring an Arc token but did not provide a timeline.
- Circle Payments Network (CPN): Allaire said CPN has 55 financial institutions enrolled, up from 29 in Q3, with 74 more in eligibility reviews. Live flows are in 14 markets, and annualized volume based on a trailing 30-day period as of Feb. 20 reached $5.7 billion, which he said was up about 68% from the Q3 update. He characterized current use cases as largely B2B cross-border merchant settlement, with additional activity in remittance-related flows.
- StableFX: Circle introduced StableFX in “production beta,” which Allaire said combines institutional-grade FX execution with on-chain atomic settlement for 24/7 conversion and risk management.
- EURC and USYC: Allaire said EURC reached EUR 310 million in Q4 (up 3.8x year-over-year) and had grown to EUR 389 million as of Feb. 20. He also said USYC, Circle’s tokenized money market fund, ended the year at about $1.5 billion and increased to over $1.7 billion since quarter-end, with demand driven by use as collateral on exchanges such as Binance.
Regulatory and enterprise adoption commentary
Management cited multiple enterprise and institutional integrations, including partnerships involving Intuit and Visa, and a formal partnership with Polymarket, which Allaire described as the largest prediction market. He also listed a range of firms that launched USDC-related products, including Cash App, Gusto, Deel, Interactive Brokers, JP Morgan, and Mastercard.
On regulation, Allaire said the GENIUS framework has been a “tailwind,” pointing to follow-on guidance from the SEC and CFTC related to the use of compliant stablecoins as collateral and broker-dealer treatment. He said Circle was “cautiously optimistic” on the CLARITY Act, describing it as close to the finish line and potentially another “significant unlock” for broader blockchain adoption.
Allaire also noted Circle has received conditional approval for a national trust bank, First National Digital Currency Bank, which he said could strengthen custody infrastructure and support Circle’s work with the OCC under GENIUS.
Guidance and updated expense definitions
Fox-Geen reiterated Circle’s approach of providing limited guidance, citing that several key drivers are visible to the market in real time. For FY 2026, Circle guided:
- Other revenue: $150 million to $170 million
- Revenue less distribution costs (RLDC) margin: 38% to 40%
- Adjusted operating expenses: $570 million to $585 million
He also said Circle will change its definition of adjusted operating expenses beginning in Q1 2026 to exclude payroll tax expense related to stock-based compensation and certain one-time legal, acquisition-related, and restructuring costs.
In Q&A, executives also discussed distribution costs, emphasizing what they described as USDC’s network effects and Circle’s discipline around incentivized partnerships.
About Circle Internet Group (NYSE:CRCL)
Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) is a financial technology company that builds infrastructure to enable businesses and developers to use and move money on public blockchains. Co-founded by Jeremy Allaire and Sean Neville, the company is best known as a principal issuer and steward of USD Coin (USDC), a dollar-pegged stablecoin developed through the CENTRE Consortium, which Circle co-founded with Coinbase. Jeremy Allaire serves as CEO and has been a visible leader in the company’s strategy and public engagement around digital currency and payments innovation.
Circle’s core products and services center on digital currency issuance and programmable payments.
