The post Circle Pushes Into Private Stablecoins With USDCx appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The goal of USDCx is to deliver “banking-level privacy” while still allowing Circle to provide compliance records when required. The project arrives as a number of major financial firms accelerate their exploration of stablecoins after the US GENIUS Act. Companies like Citigroup, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Western Union and Visa are testing or expanding blockchain-based settlement tools.  Circle Unveils Private USDCx Stablecoin issuer Circle is taking a big step toward bringing blockchain payments deeper into the institutional mainstream by developing a new privacy-enhanced version of USDC. The token is known as USDCx, and it is designed specifically for banks and enterprises that want the speed and efficiency of blockchain payments without exposing sensitive financial data on public ledgers.  According to a report from Fortune, the new token is being built in collaboration with privacy-focused blockchain developer Aleo. Co-founder Howard Wu said the goal is to offer “banking-level privacy,” which has long been missing from traditional public blockchains, where wallet addresses and transaction details are openly viewable. The goal of USDCx is to strike a balance between confidentiality and regulatory compliance. While the token’s on-chain activity will be shielded from public view, Circle will still be able to produce compliance records upon official request from law enforcement or regulators. This hybrid model could solve one of the biggest barriers preventing major financial institutions from using blockchain rails: the fear that exposing internal payment flows could compromise competitive or confidential information. Aleo firmly believes that transparency, which is often called a core blockchain strength, becomes a weakness in real enterprise settings where privacy is not optional. Circle is not the only company working on privacy-preserving digital dollars. Digital asset infrastructure provider Taurus recently introduced a private smart-contract framework that enables stablecoin transfers without revealing counterparties or transaction details. This design is tailored… The post Circle Pushes Into Private Stablecoins With USDCx appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The goal of USDCx is to deliver “banking-level privacy” while still allowing Circle to provide compliance records when required. The project arrives as a number of major financial firms accelerate their exploration of stablecoins after the US GENIUS Act. Companies like Citigroup, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Western Union and Visa are testing or expanding blockchain-based settlement tools.  Circle Unveils Private USDCx Stablecoin issuer Circle is taking a big step toward bringing blockchain payments deeper into the institutional mainstream by developing a new privacy-enhanced version of USDC. The token is known as USDCx, and it is designed specifically for banks and enterprises that want the speed and efficiency of blockchain payments without exposing sensitive financial data on public ledgers.  According to a report from Fortune, the new token is being built in collaboration with privacy-focused blockchain developer Aleo. Co-founder Howard Wu said the goal is to offer “banking-level privacy,” which has long been missing from traditional public blockchains, where wallet addresses and transaction details are openly viewable. The goal of USDCx is to strike a balance between confidentiality and regulatory compliance. While the token’s on-chain activity will be shielded from public view, Circle will still be able to produce compliance records upon official request from law enforcement or regulators. This hybrid model could solve one of the biggest barriers preventing major financial institutions from using blockchain rails: the fear that exposing internal payment flows could compromise competitive or confidential information. Aleo firmly believes that transparency, which is often called a core blockchain strength, becomes a weakness in real enterprise settings where privacy is not optional. Circle is not the only company working on privacy-preserving digital dollars. Digital asset infrastructure provider Taurus recently introduced a private smart-contract framework that enables stablecoin transfers without revealing counterparties or transaction details. This design is tailored…

Circle Pushes Into Private Stablecoins With USDCx

2025/12/10 13:34

The goal of USDCx is to deliver “banking-level privacy” while still allowing Circle to provide compliance records when required. The project arrives as a number of major financial firms accelerate their exploration of stablecoins after the US GENIUS Act. Companies like Citigroup, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Western Union and Visa are testing or expanding blockchain-based settlement tools. 

Circle Unveils Private USDCx

Stablecoin issuer Circle is taking a big step toward bringing blockchain payments deeper into the institutional mainstream by developing a new privacy-enhanced version of USDC. The token is known as USDCx, and it is designed specifically for banks and enterprises that want the speed and efficiency of blockchain payments without exposing sensitive financial data on public ledgers. 

According to a report from Fortune, the new token is being built in collaboration with privacy-focused blockchain developer Aleo. Co-founder Howard Wu said the goal is to offer “banking-level privacy,” which has long been missing from traditional public blockchains, where wallet addresses and transaction details are openly viewable.

The goal of USDCx is to strike a balance between confidentiality and regulatory compliance. While the token’s on-chain activity will be shielded from public view, Circle will still be able to produce compliance records upon official request from law enforcement or regulators. This hybrid model could solve one of the biggest barriers preventing major financial institutions from using blockchain rails: the fear that exposing internal payment flows could compromise competitive or confidential information. Aleo firmly believes that transparency, which is often called a core blockchain strength, becomes a weakness in real enterprise settings where privacy is not optional.

Circle is not the only company working on privacy-preserving digital dollars. Digital asset infrastructure provider Taurus recently introduced a private smart-contract framework that enables stablecoin transfers without revealing counterparties or transaction details. This design is tailored for corporate payrolls and intracompany settlements. 

The rollout of the US GENIUS Act, the first comprehensive US regulatory framework for dollar-based stablecoins, triggered what some analysts are calling a corporate stablecoin race. Citigroup is now collaborating with Coinbase to test stablecoin-powered payment rails, while JPMorgan and Bank of America are experimenting with their own early blockchain settlement concepts. Western Union is building a digital asset settlement platform on Solana and plans to issue its own US Dollar Payment Token, and Visa expanded its stablecoin integrations to stay competitive in the global payments landscape.

USDC and Tether’s USDT alone make up about 85% of all stablecoin activity, while synthetic dollars and PayPal’s PYUSD have grown into major players. Circle’s USDCx now enters this landscape to try and unlock the next wave of adoption.

Source: https://coinpaper.com/12997/circle-pushes-into-private-stablecoins-with-usd-cx

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BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/10 15:29