Author: Jay Yu Source: stanfordblockchain Translation: Shan Ouba, Golden Finance
Interview Guest: Heath Tarbert – Circle Internet Finance Company
Note:Heath Tarbert is Circle’s Chief Legal Officer and Head of Corporate Affairs. He has served as Chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury Department.
This article is an in-depth exploration of the discussions and opinions of Jay Yu, Stanford Blockchain Club, in an interview conducted in June 2024. Full Video: https://youtu.be/r289H_4kRxA
Introduction
Today, stablecoins have become a staple in the cryptocurrency industry, combining the reliability of the U.S. dollar as a store of value with the tradability and ease of use of blockchain tokens. This includes USDC, Circle’s flagship product, one of the most widely adopted stablecoins, and the sixth largest cryptocurrency token by market cap.
In this article, we will discuss USDC’s unique features as a stablecoin product, its current adoption as a means of payment, and the regulatory landscape that USDC and other digital assets may currently face, and what all of this means for the digital future of the dollar.
Creating a Trusted and Transparent Stablecoin
At its core, USDC solves a very simple problem: how do you buy digital assets with dollars? Before stablecoins, the solution was to move fiat dollars from the traditional banking system to cryptocurrency exchanges, which is often a slow, cumbersome, and expensive process. USDC solves this “onboarding” problem by creating a “digital dollar”, a programmable, tokenized representation of the U.S. dollar that is backed 1:1 by fiat cash and cash equivalents.
Since its inception in 2018, USDC has grown to become one of the leading stablecoins in the crypto industry. Perhaps the key difference between USDC and other major stablecoins is its emphasis on trust and transparency throughout the issuance process. Unlike other stablecoin providers, which are often based overseas and unregulated, Circle is a wholly-owned U.S. company that operates in the United States and issues these “digital dollars.” Every month, USDC’s reserve assets are independently certified by the Big Four accounting firms, and Circle has a public dashboard where anyone can view the composition of USDC’s reserves in real time. For example, as of August 8, 2024, Circle’s dashboard records $34.5 billion worth of USDC in circulation.
Circle's USDC is still the world's largest regulated digital dollar and natively supports 16 different blockchains, among which it has been widely used as the preferred stablecoin for DeFi protocols. Among them, Solana and Ethereum have the largest transaction volumes, and the main use cases are trading and other activities in the crypto ecosystem. To ensure compatibility between different supported blockchains, USDC has developed a native interoperability infrastructure for cross-chain transfers, called the Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP).
The interoperability mechanism in CCTP is very similar to Circle Mint's fiat-to-token infrastructure. Currently, CCTP supports 8 different chains, namely: Arbitrum, Avalanche, Base, Ethereum, Noble, OP Mainnet, Polygon PoS, Solana. To transfer USDC from one chain to another, such as from Ethereum to Solana, there are three main steps:
First, USDC is burned on the source chain Ethereum.
The user then obtains a signed proof of the burn from Circle, which serves as a receipt for this “burn event.”
Circle uses this proof to authorize the minting of USDC on Solana.
One of the advantages of this burn and mint mechanism is that it allows compatibility across blockchains running different virtual machines - such as Ethereum’s EVM and Solana’s SVM, thereby supporting use cases such as cross-chain swaps, deposits, and purchases in decentralized finance (DeFi) systems.
But perhaps the most exciting area of growth for USDC is that its applications extend beyond crypto trading and DeFi products. Traditionally, money has three main functions: (1) as a store of value, (2) as a unit of account, and (3) as a medium of exchange. In the real world, all three of USDC’s monetary functions are gaining adoption.
As a “store of value,” USDC becomes a natural solution for people in developing countries who don’t have reliable access to U.S. dollars or dollar-denominated bank accounts. In Argentina, where annual inflation has soared to over 200%, stablecoins have become the primary way for citizens to store value. In 2023, 60% of cryptocurrency purchases in Argentina were in dollar-denominated stablecoins such as USDC, and the country ranked 15th in the world in terms of cryptocurrency adoption. In December 2023, Circle also announced a partnership with Brazil’s Nubank to provide its 85 million customers with access to a “digital dollar.”
As a “unit of account,” USDC has also made great strides in the past few years, as Circle has conducted extensive pilots with Visa and Mastercard, two of the world’s largest payment processors. For example, Visa has been working with Crypto.com since 2021 to pilot the use of USDC as a settlement mechanism, and in 2023, Visa announced that it would work with new merchant acquirers Worldpay and Nuvei and leverage the Solana blockchain to increase support for USDC settlement. Similarly, in 2021, Mastercard announced that it would provide cryptocurrency companies with the ability to launch branded card products that are settled in stablecoins such as USDC. As a "medium of exchange," USDC is currently available at any Visa terminal through the Coinbase Visa card. Launched in 2020 for U.S. consumers, the debit card allows consumers to use USDC directly at any Visa terminal, providing a fiat-like payment experience while earning cryptocurrency rewards.
Therefore, the U.S. Congress has a strong incentive to take action on stablecoin legislation. Regulated, dollar-denominated stablecoins like USDC can greatly advance U.S. interests in the digital asset space. USDC’s reserve mandate means that there will always be demand for U.S. Treasuries. As of June 2024, stablecoins are the 18th largest holder of U.S. debt, holding more Treasuries than South Korea or Germany. This number will only increase as demand for stablecoins and digital assets grows. In other words, demand for dollar-denominated stablecoins translates directly into demand for dollars and U.S. debt. Congress must therefore increase regulatory clarity in the digital asset space to further strengthen the power of the dollar in the digital age.
Conclusion
Since their inception a few years ago, stablecoins like USDC have come a long way to become one of the most compelling use cases for blockchain technology. The core idea of stablecoins is to bring the interoperability, composability, and accessibility of the Internet to traditional monetary institutions, and USDC is leading the way in building a secure and transparent “digital dollar.”
In the coming years, as stablecoin products, adoption, and regulation mature and develop, we can expect millions of businesses and individuals to adopt new open standards for financial transactions. In this sense, Circle's mission is to realize the unfinished promise of the Internet - to bring the openness and transparency of the Internet to the monetary field and ultimately build an Internet financial system.
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