Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86
JUST IN: Circle $CRCL just won an American federal charter that legally forbids it from doing the 3 big things that make banking profitable, and it spent a decade campaigning for exactly that outcome.
Every dollar backing $USDC must now sit frozen in cash or U.S. Treasuries. Circle cannot lend against it. They cannot pay a cent of interest to the people holding it too.
Then carefully read the exemption the same law wrote for the american banks, and the entire story inverts.
The GENIUS Act does not cover tokenized deposits. That one carve-out is the most consequential sentence in American money right now.
Circle's digital dollar is chained to 100% reserves, unlendable, yieldless, uninsured. A bank issuing the same thing on the same blockchain is bound by none of it. The bank keeps fractional reserve. It lends against that dollar and multiplies it. It pays interest on it. It carries federal deposit insurance. And in a crisis times they can borrow from the U.S. Federal Reserve.
Same technology. Same rails. One is a straitjacket. The other one is a bank that settles pretty faster.
So when Swift launched a blockchain consortium with 17 banks, including Citi and HSBC, on the very day Circle got its charter, that was not a coincidence. The incumbents are moving onto Circle's rails while carrying an advantage the law explicitly hands them and explicitly denies Circle.
Now take a close look at what a decade of compliance actually bought. A trust charter that cannot take deposits, cannot make loans, carries no federal insurance, and does not even issue $USDC. The stock is down 20% this year. And Tether, which never asked anyone's permission for anything, sits at 184 billion dollars, two and a half times the size of USDC.
Circle did not lose to a better product. They lost to a law they helped write. Circle spent 10 years paving a road, and Wall Street champs drove down it in armored trucks, carrying the one thing Circle is now legally forbidden to hold. The right to lend.