Why Is ARK Buying More Circle Shares?

Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest has increased its exposure to Circle Internet Group even as the USDC issuer’s stock remains under pressure following a sharp retreat from its post-IPO peak.

ARK bought another 220,000 Circle shares across three of its actively managed exchange-traded funds on Tuesday, according to the firm’s daily trade disclosure. Based on Circle’s Tuesday closing price of $63.22 on the New York Stock Exchange, the purchase was worth about $13.9 million.

The latest buy shows ARK leaning further into Circle at a point when market confidence in the stock has weakened. Circle shares were down about 22% year-to-date and roughly 76% below their post-IPO high, leaving the company caught between long-term stablecoin growth expectations and near-term pressure on its public-market valuation.

For ARK, the move fits its broader strategy of adding exposure to companies tied to digital asset infrastructure during periods of market weakness. Circle is not simply a crypto equity proxy. Its business is tied to the growth of USDC, stablecoin payments, tokenized finance, and the use of dollar-backed assets across exchanges, DeFi platforms, and institutional crypto products.

How Large Is ARK’s Circle Position Now?

ARK’s latest purchase brings its disclosed July acquisitions of Circle shares to 725,517. The firm previously bought 287,609 shares on July 1 and another 217,896 shares on July 9, before adding the latest 220,000-share block.

The buying has been spread across ARK’s major actively managed ETFs, showing that Circle has become a meaningful position across the firm’s innovation and fintech portfolios. As of Wednesday, Circle accounted for 4.37% of the ARK Fintech Innovation ETF, making it the fund’s seventh-largest holding. That position was valued at about $33 million.

Circle also represented 3.35% of the flagship ARK Innovation ETF, where it ranked as the ninth-largest holding and was valued at about $218 million. Those allocations show that ARK is treating Circle as a core digital finance holding rather than a small tactical trade.

The timing is notable because ARK is adding while several investors are reassessing the stock’s risk profile. Public stablecoin companies remain a new category for equity markets, and investors are still working through how to value revenue tied to reserve assets, transaction activity, regulatory status, and stablecoin supply growth.

Investor Takeaway

ARK’s buying suggests conviction in Circle’s long-term role in stablecoin infrastructure, but the stock’s decline shows the market is no longer pricing that story without question. The key issue is whether USDC activity can support the valuation after the IPO surge faded.

Why Are Analysts Turning More Cautious?

ARK’s latest purchase came as analysts reassessed Circle’s outlook following the stock’s decline. Digital asset research platform 10x Research said it no longer considers Circle a buy after the stock fell back below $80. The firm said it had previously viewed CRCL as attractive below that level, but now believes Circle’s fundamentals have “meaningfully deteriorated.”

The concern centers on USDC activity. The research report pointed to slower usage, including a decline in active addresses, as a risk for Circle. For a stablecoin issuer, that metric matters because market capitalization alone does not capture the full health of the network. Investor attention also turns to transaction activity, exchange usage, DeFi demand, payments adoption, and whether users are actively moving the token across platforms.

USDC’s market capitalization has declined roughly 3% year-to-date to about $73 billion. That decline is not large enough on its own to signal structural weakness, especially since USDC remains around 17% higher than a year ago. But the combination of softer activity data and a falling share price makes the equity story harder to defend in the short term.

10x Research said a bullish case for Circle remains, but framed the recent decline as a turning point. The stock could either present a long-term buying opportunity or mark the start of a more prolonged downturn, depending on whether USDC growth reaccelerates and whether investors regain confidence in Circle’s public-market valuation.

What Does This Mean for Stablecoin Stocks?

Circle’s stock performance is becoming an early test of how equity markets value stablecoin businesses. The company benefits from a strong regulatory profile, a large dollar-backed token, and a central role in crypto trading and DeFi. But public investors are also applying more traditional scrutiny to growth, margins, user activity, and valuation after the IPO excitement cooled.

That creates a divide between strategic buyers and cautious analysts. ARK appears focused on Circle’s long-term exposure to stablecoin adoption, especially if digital dollars become more embedded in payments, tokenized assets, and institutional crypto settlement. Analysts focused on near-term fundamentals are watching whether USDC usage is slowing and whether the stock still deserves a premium after its sharp drop.

For investors, the main question is whether Circle’s decline reflects a temporary reset after an overheated listing or a deeper repricing of stablecoin-linked equities. ARK’s latest purchase adds support to the long-term bull case, but it does not remove the pressure on Circle to show stronger USDC activity and clearer public-market earnings durability.

The next phase for Circle will depend less on the headline size of ARK’s buying and more on whether USDC can return to stronger growth. Until then, the stock is likely to remain a high-conviction bet for some investors and a valuation risk for others.