Circle Launches USDC on Injective as Stock Surges 20% on CLARITY Compromise
Circle Internet Group (NYSE: CRCL) shares surged as much as 20% on May 4, 2026, reaching an intraday high of $119.99 after lawmakers finalized a weekend compromise on stablecoin rewards within the proposed CLARITY Act , removing a major regulatory overhang for the issuer of the world's second largest stablecoin. Three days later, on May 7, Circle deepened its multi chain strategy by launching native USDC on the Injective blockchain , adding a high throughput DeFi network to a roster that already spans more than 30 chains. The back to back developments underscore the twin engines propelling Circle's post IPO momentum: a rapidly improving U.S. regulatory environment and a deliberate push to embed USDC into every significant blockchain ecosystem before competitors can establish footholds. The CLARITY Compromise and What It Means for Circle The sticking point in months of negotiations over the CLARITY Act had been whether stablecoin issuers could offer interest or yield like returns to holders. A draft circulated earlier in the year proposed banning anything "economically or functionally equivalent" to deposit interest on passive holdings, language that alarmed the crypto industry because it risked turning yield bearing USDC products into regulatory liabilities. Senators Thom Tillis (R NC) and Angela Alsobrooks (D MD) finalized a compromise over the weekend of May 3 4, 2026 that drew a workable line: passive yields tied to simply holding a stablecoin remain prohibited, but rewards earned through activities such as trading, transactions, and staking are explicitly permitted [1][2]. The distinction matters enormously for Circle. Its distribution partner Coinbase , which earns revenue by rewarding USDC holders who participate actively on its platform, saw its own shares rise 6.1% on the same day [2]. Financial services firm BitGo gained 10% and Galaxy Digital added roughly 3% , illustrating how broadly the compromise lifted crypto adjacent equities [2]. Bank of America analyst Ebrahim H. Poonawala captured the institutional read in a note published Monday: "Across bank sub sectors the CLARITY Act resolution of the stablecoin yield debate is a net positive. It should alleviate concerns related to deposit flight, lessen regulatory ambiguity, and enable banks to interact with digital asset infrastructure under more structured conditions." For Circle, the regulatory clarity arrives at a moment when institutional treasury adoption is already propelling USDC supply to levels that would have seemed implausible a year ago. Native USDC on Injective: The 30 Plus Chain Strategy On May 7, Circle announced the deployment of native USDC on Injective , a proof of stake Layer 1 blockchain built for financial applications including perpetuals, derivatives, and spot markets. The integration activates Circle's Cross Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) , enabling users to move USDC directly between Injective and other CCTP supported networks without relying on wrapped or bridged token variants that carry smart contract risk and liquidity fragmentation [3]. Injective joins a recent wave of Chain deployments that includes Sei , Aptos , Sui , and Hyperliquid . The pattern is deliberate: Circle targets chains with active DeFi user bases and institutional builder communities, where native USDC can displace bridged alternatives and capture settlement volume at the protocol level. Injective's April 2026 mainnet upgrade, which introduced instant stablecoin settlement and improved compatibility tooling for developers, made the timing logical. Jeremy Allaire , Circle's founder and CEO, has articulated the underlying thesis publicly: "Stablecoins represent the highest utility form of money ever invented, and incentives will only drive their adoption. The crypto industry will benefit from advancing U.S. leadership here, which is vital to the national interest." Circle's USDC commands 24% of the total stablecoin market capitalization, a share that management is targeting to grow through both chain expansion and institutional product development [1]. The $150 Billion Supply Target The most ambitious marker Circle has put in the market is a $150 billion USDC supply target for H2 2026 , against a current circulating supply of approximately $112 billion as of April 2026 [3]. Reaching that figure would require roughly $38 billion in net new issuance in a matter of months, a trajectory that implies continued acceleration rather than a plateau. Two demand vectors are driving management's confidence. First, corporate and sovereign treasury teams have accelerated adoption of USDC as a dollar denominated settlement rail that bypasses correspondent banking delays. Second, Decentralized Physical Infrastructure (DePIN) projects, which coordinate real world hardware networks such as wireless nodes, energy grids, and sensor arrays through on chain incentives, are increasingly denominating payments and collateral in USDC because of its chain agnostic availability and regulatory clarity relative to other stablecoins. The table below summarizes Circle's current chain footprint alongside key supply and market metrics: | Metric | Value | Date/Period | | | | | | USDC circulating supply | ~$112 billion | April 2026 | | USDC supply target | $150 billion | H2 2026 | | Net issuance needed | ~$38 billion | Remaining H2 2026 | | USDC share of stablecoin market cap | 24% | May 2026 | | Chains with native USDC | 30+ | May 2026 | | CRCL intraday high (May 4) | $119.99 | May 4, 2026 | | CRCL one day gain | ~20% | May 4, 2026 | | Coinbase (COIN) one day gain | 6.1% | May 4, 2026 | | BitGo one day gain | ~10% | May 4, 2026 | Q1 Results on May 11 as the Next Catalyst With the stock repricing on regulatory tailwinds and the Injective launch reinforcing the chain expansion narrative, investor attention is already turning to Circle's Q1 2026 earnings release , scheduled for Monday, May 11, 2026 [4]. The print will be the first quarterly disclosure since the company's …