CRCL shares jumped 9.74% on March 9 to close at $111.84, then opened higher again on March 10 at $115.11, as Bernstein reiterated its Outperform rating with a price target that assumes stablecoin adoption is still in its early innings.
The two-day chart tells a clean story. CRCL traded in a tight range between $108 and $112 through most of March 9, then broke sharply higher late in the session on volume that dwarfed the rest of the day.
The move carried into March 10’s open, with the stock touching $115.55 at the high before settling around $115.11 at time of writing. That puts CRCL at its highest level since early November and roughly double its recent lows, a recovery that preceded the Bernstein report rather than being caused by it.
The report validated a move already underway rather than initiating one.
The core of Bernstein’s thesis is a single observation: USDC supply has reached an all-time high of $78 billion while Bitcoin remains below its own peak. Stablecoin adoption is decoupling from broader crypto market sentiment. That decoupling is the structural argument. If USDC demand grows independent of Bitcoin price cycles, Circle’s revenue base becomes less correlated to crypto volatility and more comparable to a payments infrastructure business with secular growth characteristics.
The numbers supporting that framing are significant. Total stablecoin transaction volume reached $55 trillion in 2025. Adjusted payment activity grew 91% year-over-year. Visa now supports over 130 stablecoin-linked cards across 50 countries. The Circle Payments Network operates cross-border corridors spanning the U.S., EU, Singapore, India, and the Philippines. None of those metrics move with Bitcoin’s price. They move with global payment volume and stablecoin adoption rates.
Bernstein projects a 47% compound annual revenue growth rate through 2027 and describes Circle as a long-term category winner based on regulatory positioning and established liquidity infrastructure.
The most forward-looking element of Bernstein’s thesis is the AI agent economy. Analysts specifically highlighted machine-to-machine micropayments between AI agents as a future catalyst for stablecoin demand. The use case is straightforward: autonomous AI systems that call external APIs, purchase data, or pay for compute resources need a payment layer that operates programmatically without human intervention. Traditional payment rails require authorization flows designed for human users. Stablecoins operating on smart contract infrastructure do not.
This is early enough that no meaningful revenue from AI agent payments exists in Circle’s current financials. Bernstein is pricing in the optionality rather than the reality. Whether that optionality materializes depends on how quickly autonomous AI systems become commercially deployed at scale and whether stablecoins establish themselves as the default settlement layer for machine transactions before alternatives emerge.
A $190 price target from $115 requires approximately 65% appreciation. Bernstein’s model gets there through the 47% revenue CAGR assumption combined with category leadership premium valuation. The CLARITY Act’s stablecoin provisions, still deadlocked as covered earlier this week, represent both upside and risk to that model. Passage with yield provisions intact accelerates Circle’s competitive position. Passage with yield restricted narrows it. No passage introduces regulatory uncertainty that could compress the multiple regardless of revenue growth.
Circle is currently valued at approximately $15.29 billion according to public market data. Bernstein’s $190 target implies a market cap approaching $26 billion. Whether that valuation is justified depends entirely on whether $55 trillion in annual stablecoin volume grows toward $100 trillion or plateaus.
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