Writing: The Defiant
Translation: White Talk Blockchain
In the traditional financial system, cross-border capital flows are like a friction-filled marathon, with approximately $3 trillion constantly in transit, becoming a sunk cost that yields no benefits. As blockchain technology and regulatory frameworks mature, stablecoins are moving from the fringes of the crypto world to the core of the global economy. This interview features an in-depth conversation with Circle’s Chief Product Officer, Nikil Tandog. From his dual perspective as a technical expert and a global observer, he reveals how Circle has evolved from a single stablecoin issuer into a full-stack platform covering assets, payments, and infrastructure.
This article not only explores how USDC is reshaping market trust through compliance in the post-banking crisis era but also forward-looking predicts the financial landscape of 2030: by then, money will become a programmable primitive like electricity, AI agents will replace humans as the main actors in payments, and a new legal framework drafted under the Genius Act will pave the way for internet-scale fintech companies. It is a profound reflection on productivity, economic inclusion, and the vision of “money as code,” providing key insights into the flow of wealth in the next decade.
Host: We all know that USDC is Circle’s flagship product and a leading stablecoin. Under current industry consensus, stablecoins have become the most successful entry point into cryptocurrencies. Could you share what the core driving arguments for Circle are right now? What are your main strategies, and how have they evolved from the early days?
Nikhil: Circle is already a company with 12 or 13 years of history, deeply involved in the stablecoin space for a long time. USDC was launched about 7 years ago. For a long time, stablecoins weren’t seen as the core use case of crypto. Back then, people preferred building fully decentralized, self-sovereign currencies, and the idea of “uploading dollars to the internet” seemed lacking in imagination.
But when I joined the company, that was exactly what excited me most. Because worldwide, access to dollars is a “superpower.” I grew up in India, and I understand how much people outside the Western world value the US financial system and the dollar. Stablecoins are not just financial tools; they are solutions for economic inclusion.
Our development has gone through several stages: First, we built one of the largest global stablecoin networks. The network’s value lies in the willingness of trading parties; USDC’s success is because recipients are willing to accept it for payments. By establishing numerous fiat on/off-ramps, we embedded USDC into both traditional crypto ecosystems and modern payment systems.
Second, Circle is transforming from a single stablecoin issuer into a “three-layer” platform company. This includes:
This evolution is actually a realization of our founder Jeremy Allaire’s vision from years ago. We had to take step-by-step actions to today, accumulating enough market share and trust to truly start building this comprehensive platform architecture.
Host: Last year, during the US commercial banking crisis, USDC’s circulation was impacted because some of the collateral banks encountered issues. There was a trust crisis at that time, but you successfully rebounded and resumed growth. What drove this growth?
Nikhil: The growth came from a renewed recognition of asset value and functionality. In the core asset trading markets, USDC is now seen as more valuable than before. In payment systems, it demonstrated stronger programmability and infrastructure support, which other stablecoins lack.
Currently, USDC operates on 28 public blockchains, and we also run a cross-chain transfer protocol (CCTP) to ensure USDC can move seamlessly and securely across different chains. More importantly, we have invested heavily in regulatory infrastructure. We comply with the EU’s MiCA regulations, and in the US, the Genius Act (assuming it’s a significant legislation around 2026) essentially codifies Circle’s compliant operational model into law.
People are beginning to realize that stablecoins are not just financial assets—they are a network. When you and I make transactions, we seek assets with the highest liquidity, reliability, and 24/7/365 availability.
Host: Regarding competition, Tether (USDT) remains the largest circulating stablecoin. The market generally perceives Circle as following a compliant, transparent path, while Tether is seen as operating in a gray area. What does this positioning mean for you?
Nikhil: I don’t speculate on competitors’ reserve structures. I can only say that Circle insists on transparency. We have a Circle Reserve Fund, publish checkpoints daily, and anyone can verify the fund flows. As a publicly listed company (or in the process of going public), we undergo strict audits and financial disclosures.
One purpose of going public is to assure users worldwide that we are not a small, secretive operation but a modern financial institution with checks and balances and regulation. We want transparency to shine into every corner.
In terms of growth regions, although our primary liquidity is concentrated in permitted countries, USDC shows strong global presence in secondary markets. About 190 countries worldwide hold USDC. It’s like an internet protocol: if you build an open, robust API (the USDC infrastructure), developers worldwide will build applications on top. We are working to enter emerging markets like Latin America and Africa through compliant “gateway” channels, collaborating with local regulators to unleash local economic ambitions.
Host: With increased regulatory clarity, especially with the passage of the Genius Act, has the willingness of institutional participants (like banks and fintech companies) changed?
Nikhil: The change is astonishing. Previously, fintech companies entering a market had to establish banking relationships locally, which was very slow. Stablecoins enable financial services to go global like Netflix, leveraging internet scale effects.
Here’s a personal insight: On the first Monday after the Genius Act passed, I had a meeting in our office with one of the largest US fintech companies. They are already developing very complex stablecoin integration plans.
Host: Looking ahead to 2030, what do you think the world will look like?
Nikhil: By 2030, the global financial landscape will undergo fundamental change.
Host: Since many blockchains already exist, why is Circle building its own infrastructure layer, ARC? How does it differ from solutions like Ethereum Layer 2?
Nikhil: It stems from our industry experience. When Android emerged during Google’s era, the market already had six operating systems, but Android succeeded because it built a complete ecosystem.
Current blockchain infrastructure still faces huge barriers to mainstream user onboarding. For example, creating wallets for hundreds of millions of users is extremely costly. We aim to solve these practical pain points. ARC is not meant to exclude other chains. USDC will continue its multi-chain strategy, but ARC will serve as the underlying tech stack, offering features like:
Host: One last question: what areas do you think stablecoins are “not good at” or where traditional finance has advantages?
Nikhil: That’s an interesting question. But I find it hard to think of what stablecoins are not good at. It’s like asking “what power is bad at” or “what the internet is bad at.”
Some say domestic payments are already fast enough and don’t need stablecoins. But the real value lies in programmability. A non-programmable real-time payment system is just simple value transfer. Once you put it on-chain and add programmability, it can support more complex business logic and automation. Stablecoins are a core underlying technology—like electricity—when introduced into a process, they usually improve it.
Host: What exciting things do you think Circle will launch in 2026?
Nikhil: We will continue focusing on three pillars:
We believe that by the end of this decade, agent-based, programmable payments will fully unleash global productivity.
Host: Thank you very much, Nikhil, for your insights. We will continue to follow Circle and ARC’s progress.
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