Circle Internet (NYSE:CRCL) experienced a roughly 2% decline in early trading Wednesday morning following a news report that three major payment firms are moving toward creating a new stablecoin platform.
The report identified Stripe, Visa and Mastercard as the parties preparing to roll out the platform, citing "three people familiar with the plans." It also said that cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase is exploring a role in the initiative, according to one source.
Market participants appeared to react to the prospect of expanded competition in the stablecoin space, with Circle's shares moving lower in the wake of the report. The move was concentrated in morning trading and reflected investor attention on potential shifts in the payments and crypto infrastructure landscape.
Requests for comment on the report drew no substantive responses from the companies named. Stripe, Visa and Coinbase each declined to comment on the report. Mastercard had not responded to requests for comment by publication time, the report said.
The reporting described the initiative as near introduction, but did not provide further detail on timing, structure or commercial terms beyond the participation being explored by Coinbase. The account relied on a small number of unnamed sources - specifically the three people cited regarding the payments firms and the single source referenced for Coinbase's involvement.
Given the limited, source-based nature of the reporting, important details - including the precise timetable for any launch, which firms would be formal partners, and the platform's operational or regulatory design - remain unconfirmed publicly. The companies named in the report declined or did not respond to requests for comment, leaving open questions about the accuracy and completeness of the accounts cited.
Investors and observers in payments, banking and crypto markets will likely await further confirmations or official statements before drawing firmer conclusions about competitive impacts or market implications.
Source notes: The reporting cited three people familiar with the plans for the proposed platform and one source regarding Coinbase's exploration of participation. Stripe, Visa and Coinbase declined to comment; Mastercard had not responded to requests for comment by publication time.