Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire has pushed back on the economic model behind Open USD (OUSD), arguing that stablecoins are “platform businesses” whose competitive edge is built over years through integrations, liquidity, regulatory approvals, and reserve management. In an X post published Wednesday, Allaire said attempts to differentiate new stablecoins by offering permanently free and unlimited minting and redemption, or by sharing most reserve income with partners, may prove difficult to sustain at scale.
The remarks come as the industry watches a potential shift in stablecoin competition. Open Standard—backed by more than 140 payments, banking, technology and crypto companies—announced Open USD on Tuesday, with the token expected to launch later in 2026. The project, which includes well-known participants such as Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase, BlackRock and Google, is widely seen as a direct challenge to the market dominance of Circle’s USDC and Tether’s USDT.
Allaire’s central argument is that stablecoins operate like platform networks rather than standalone products. In his Wednesday post, he described stablecoin ecosystems as benefiting from compounding network effects: once integrations and liquidity deepen, new participants gain access to reliable rails for payments, custody and trading, which in turn attracts more integrations.
According to Allaire, this process is difficult to replicate quickly because it requires persistent spending—not just on technology, but on compliance and the relationships that allow reserves to be managed and moved through traditional financial channels. He also pointed to the practical need for regulatory approvals and ongoing reserve management capabilities, which tend to evolve alongside market growth and supervisory expectations.
Allaire also challenged specific elements of Open USD’s business approach. He questioned the long-term sustainability of a model that permanently offers free, unlimited minting and redemption. In his view, if costs are not covered by fees or other revenue streams, infrastructure build-out could be underfunded as volumes rise.
He further argued that returning nearly all reserve income to partners could create a mismatch between short-term incentives and long-term durability. “Starving an infrastructure,” as he put it, would be a risk if the system relies on distributed rewards without preserving enough capital to maintain and expand the operational backbone.
These points matter for investors and ecosystem participants because stablecoin economics influence who bears the burden of compliance, liquidity provisioning, system resilience and customer support. If the business model shifts too quickly toward partner payouts, the long-term ability to maintain service quality—especially during stressed market conditions—could be affected.
Analysts at Bernstein released a research note saying OUSD could become the “strongest and first new entrant to challenge the duopoly of Circle and Tether.” The argument rests on the project’s breadth across payments, banking, technology and commerce, which could accelerate adoption compared with smaller entrants.
Still, Bernstein flagged material open questions. In particular, the analysts said governance, operational architecture and the revenue-sharing formula are not yet fully resolved. Coordinating more than 140 partners, Bernstein suggested, would require significant work—both technically and administratively—to align incentives and maintain consistent oversight across issuers, reserve managers and distribution channels.
Bernstein also cited Circle’s scale of spending, saying Circle spends close to $500 million on marketing, infrastructure, technology and compliance. The implication for readers is straightforward: building a stablecoin network at the level demanded by payments and banking workflows often requires sustained investment, not just brand and partnerships.
Not all responses to OUSD are bullish. Lorenzo Valente, director of research at ARK Invest, offered a more skeptical assessment on X, arguing that OUSD still faces the “cold-start” problem created by the liquidity depth of USDC and USDT.
Valente characterized the announcement as a “giant” letter of intent, adding that many participants already support competing stablecoins or maintain their own infrastructure. He argued that the partner map includes firms that are tied to USDC directly or that have parallel business stacks, which could dilute the willingness to steer new users toward a single alternative.
While Valente’s criticism does not deny that Open USD has strong backing, it highlights an asymmetry: liquidity is not only a feature—it’s a distribution advantage. Unless OUSD can attract meaningful liquidity early and keep it growing, payments and on-chain integrations may hesitate to prioritize it over the incumbent tokens that already serve as default settlement assets.
Open USD’s timeline—expected to go live later in 2026—means much of the most consequential work remains ahead: governance details, operational structure, and a clearer revenue-and-incentive framework will likely determine whether the project can sustain adoption without compromising infrastructure. Investors and builders should watch for concrete commitments around how OUSD manages liquidity, compliance and partner incentives as the launch approaches, since those choices may decide whether the duopoly faces genuine pressure or merely symbolic competition.
This article was originally published as Circle CEO Highlights USDC’s Network Strength as OUSD Launches on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.


