TLDR Circle stock fell 20% on Tuesday following a wave of negative news Draft language for the U.S. STABLE Act could ban yield payments on stablecoins like USDCTLDR Circle stock fell 20% on Tuesday following a wave of negative news Draft language for the U.S. STABLE Act could ban yield payments on stablecoins like USDC

Circle Internet (CRCL) Stock Drops 20% as Cathie Wood’s Ark Buys the Dip

2026/03/25 17:19
3 min read
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TLDR

  • Circle stock fell 20% on Tuesday following a wave of negative news
  • Draft language for the U.S. STABLE Act could ban yield payments on stablecoins like USDC
  • Onchain investigator ZachXBT revealed Circle froze USDC wallets tied to a U.S. civil case
  • Rival Tether announced its first full financial audit with a Big Four firm, threatening Circle’s “compliant” edge
  • Ark Invest bought 161,513 CRCL shares worth $16.34 million across ARKK, ARKW, and ARKF

Circle Internet Group (CRCL) had a rough Tuesday. The stock dropped 20% in a single session, hit by three separate pieces of bad news that landed almost simultaneously. By the close, CRCL was sitting at $101.17.


CRCL Stock Card
Circle Internet Group, CRCL

Analysts at Mizuho pointed to draft language from the U.S. STABLE Act as the main driver of the drop. The draft, which circulated among industry insiders earlier in the week, signals a potential ban on yield payments for simply holding stablecoins. For Circle, whose USDC product is a core part of its business model, that kind of regulatory shift would carry real consequences.

At the same time, onchain investigator ZachXBT posted that Circle had frozen the USDC balances of 16 hot wallets tied to various businesses. The affected wallets were linked to an ongoing U.S. civil case.

The post drew attention to the centralisation risk that comes with USDC. Unlike decentralised alternatives, Circle can — and does — freeze funds at the direction of U.S. authorities.

Tether Moves on Audit

Then came the Tether news. Circle’s biggest rival announced it is moving ahead with its first full financial audit and has hired a Big Four accounting firm to carry it out.

That matters because Circle has long marketed itself as the transparent, compliant alternative to Tether. If Tether closes that gap, one of CRCL’s key selling points gets a lot thinner.

Three separate headwinds in one day. It added up fast.

Despite the selloff, CRCL bounced 1.5% in after-hours trading. Zooming out, the stock is still up 65% over the past month, though it remains down 23% over the past six months.

Ark Buys the Dip

While most investors were heading for the exit, Ark Invest was buying. Cathie Wood’s firm picked up 161,513 CRCL shares across its ARKK, ARKW, and ARKF ETFs on Tuesday, totalling $16.34 million based on the day’s closing price.

The move looks like a deliberate dip-buy. Ark has been actively managing its crypto-related positions throughout early 2026, including exposure to Coinbase and Robinhood.

Circle is currently the third-largest holding in Ark’s ARKK ETF, with a 5.48% weighting valued at $334.5 million. Ark’s strategy caps any single holding at around 10% of a fund’s portfolio, which drives ongoing rebalancing as prices shift.

On the sell side, Ark offloaded 41,064 Bullish (BLSH) shares worth $1.53 million. Bullish stock dropped 5.51% on the day.

CRCL is up 65% over the past month despite Tuesday’s sharp drop.

The post Circle Internet (CRCL) Stock Drops 20% as Cathie Wood’s Ark Buys the Dip appeared first on CoinCentral.

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