Citigroup: Stablecoin Rewards Limits May Slow USDC Growth
TLDR Citigroup said proposed limits on stablecoin rewards may slow USDC growth but not harm Circle’s core business model. The draft Clarity Act would restrict yield on passive stablecoin balances while allowing activity-based rewards. Analysts stated that Circle earns reserve income from USDC backing assets and does not directly pay yield to holders. Circle generated $2.64 billion in reserve income in fiscal year 2025. USDC supply increased from about $30 billion to $80 billion over the past two years. Citigroup said proposed U.S. limits on stablecoin rewards may slow Circle’s expansion but not derail its investment case. The bank stated that draft market structure rules could restrict certain incentives tied to stablecoin balances. However, analysts maintained that Circle’s core revenue model tied to reserve income remains intact. Stablecoin Rewards and USDC Face Draft Rule Changes Citigroup analysts, led by Peter Christiansen, addressed the draft Clarity Act in a Tuesday report. They wrote, “We view this development potentially as a scaling setback, but not a thesis killer.” The draft permits narrow rewards programs if they do not resemble bank deposit interest. However, the proposal would restrict yield on passive stablecoin balances. Analysts said Circle already transfers most reserve income to distribution partners such as Coinbase. Therefore, a broader ban on third-party rewards would not directly reduce Circle’s net revenue. Still, the bank expects weaker incentives to hold USDC in the short term. Analysts described USDC as a payment instrument rather than a security. They added that stablecoin volume, not circulation, remains the main indicator of adoption. Citigroup assigned Circle shares a high risk rating with a $243 price target. The stock traded near $100 when the report was published. Shares fell about 20% on Tuesday after the draft bill circulated. Coinbase Yield Product and Circle Reserve Income The draft Clarity Act triggered concern about bannin...
Comments
Log in to comment