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CRCLX drops 7.5% in the past 24 hours: How will regulatory storms influence Circle's tokenized stocks?
In recent times, the focus of the crypto market has once again converged on stock tokens on the Gate platform. As tokenized stock of Circle, CRCLX’s price volatility not only reflects the market’s assessment of Circle’s valuation itself, but also ties more directly to the regulatory direction of the entire stablecoin industry. As of April 2, CRCLX has seen a significant drop, drawing widespread attention from investors.
CRCLX Latest Market Snapshot
According to data from Gate’s stock token trading page, CRCLX is currently quoted at $88.88, down 7.8% over the past 24 hours. This price action is largely in sync with Circle Internet Group (CRCL) in the U.S. stock market. The data shows that Circle’s U.S. stock closed at $90.73 on April 1, down 4.91% on the day, and at one point during intraday trading it hit a low of $90.64.
In terms of market cap, CRCLX’s current circulating market cap is about $41.3 million, with a total supply of 2.5171 million tokens. Notably, different data sources report differences in CRCLX’s circulating amount; some platforms show a circulating supply of 0.932 million or fewer tokens. This may be related to the multi-chain issuance mechanism for tokenized stocks and the distribution of tokens across different custody accounts. Overall, the decline over the past 24 hours is part of an ongoing adjustment that has continued since late March.
The Key Driver Behind the Plunge
The “Interest Prohibition” Clause in the Clarity Act Keeps Gaining Momentum
A new draft of the Clarity Act, revealed by the U.S. Senate on March 24, became the trigger for this round of decline. The draft’s core provisions clearly propose: prohibiting stablecoin issuers from paying passive interest to holders, and also prohibiting any workaround that is “economically equivalent” to bank deposit interest.
The news sparked a sharp reaction in the market. On that day, Circle’s stock price plunged 20%, marking the largest single-day drop since listing, and CRCLX also fell sharply. Although today is April 2, more than a week has passed since the draft was revealed, and its impact is still being digested. The market is re-evaluating Circle’s profit model—if USDC can’t retain users by attracting them through interest, Circle’s revenue-sharing arrangement with partners such as Coinbase will face a reshaping. While analysis suggests that in the medium to long term this could help Circle transition from a “savings product” into a “payments tool,” leading to a higher valuation, in the short term market sentiment remains skewed pessimistic.
Misreading and Correcting the Narrative Around Tether’s Compliance
Nearly at the same time (March 24), Tether announced it had hired the “Big Four” accounting firms (KPMG) for the first-ever comprehensive financial audit in its history, and it also hired PwC to upgrade internal systems. Some market participants interpreted this as “the compliance premium for USDC is about to disappear,” which created a negative outlook for CRCL.
However, as time went on, more rational voices began to take the upper hand. There is a huge gap between “hiring audits” and “passing audits.” For Tether, which manages assets exceeding $180 billion and whose reserve composition is complex, a comprehensive audit may take 12 to 24 months. More importantly, even if the audit passes, the assets included in Tether’s reserves—gold, Bitcoin, and loans, among others—do not meet the “100% composed of cash or short-term U.S. Treasuries” requirement under the GENIUS Act that has already been signed into law. Therefore, as a stablecoin issuer “that has been compliant from day one,” Circle’s moat has not been truly breached, but fluctuations in market sentiment are still reflected in CRCLX’s price.
Forward Outlook
Although CRCLX’s price faces pressure in the short term, its core investment thesis has not been completely changed. Circle is still a payment-track operator that has been certified under the U.S. legal framework—compliant, and operating on a globally unified basis. For investors focused on Gate’s CRCLX, the following time points are worth paying close attention to:
Conclusion
In summary, CRCLX recorded a 7.5% decline on April 2 as the result of multiple negative factors converging. The core driving force is the market’s reshaping of expectations for the stablecoin profit model brought by the U.S. Clarity Act, alongside hawkish remarks from overseas regulators such as the UK.
Although Tether’s compliance moves have triggered short-term disruptions, Circle’s fundamentals and moat remain solid. During the current window when regulatory policies are being rolled out in dense succession, CRCLX’s price volatility may intensify. Investors trading on platforms such as Gate should closely monitor the latest developments in the policy landscape and manage risks accordingly.