Circle Mints $1.25B USDC on Solana as Stablecoin Issuance Surges Post-October Crash
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On Friday, blockchain sleuths noticed a dramatic burst of minting activity from Circle: the issuer of USD Coin (USDC) minted roughly $1.25 billion of USDC on the Solana network in the past 24 hours, according to a post from on-chain tracker Lookonchain that pointed to Solana transaction records. The move is the latest in a string of large issuances from the two biggest stablecoin issuers, and Lookonchain said Circle and Tether together have created roughly $17.25 billion of new stablecoins since the market turbulence that began around October 11.
The timing and scale of the mints have drawn attention because they arrive amid a renewed scramble for liquidity and shifting market sentiment. Circle’s on-chain activity on Solana follows other high-volume issuances this month. Some reports suggest Circle minted over $2 billion on Solana across several days, and independent trackers flagged instances where hundreds of millions moved on and off chains in rapid succession. That flow of freshly issued USDC has become a major plumbing layer for exchanges, trading desks and decentralized finance platforms that rely on stablecoins for settlement and leverage.
Stablecoin Supply at Scale
USD Coin now sits alongside Tether as one of the largest stablecoins by market value: USDC’s market capitalization sits in the neighborhood of $75–76 billion, while Tether (USDT) remains larger at roughly $184 billion in circulation. That gap matters. Tether’s size and its role as the deepest pool of dollar-equivalent liquidity mean that any material issuance from either issuer can shift on-chain balances and short-term funding conditions.
Cryptocurrency markets have been sensitive to liquidity dynamics this month. Bitcoin, which peaked in early October and then retraced, has been trading in the mid-to-high five-figure range; recent feeds show it trading roughly between the mid-$80,000s and low-$90,000s depending on the time and exchange, while ether has been hovering around the $3,000 mark. When large amounts of stablecoins enter circulation quickly, traders can route that liquidity into spot buying, derivatives positions, or exchange-collateralized flows, moves that can amplify volatility and provide fuel for a rebound if demand follows.
But freshly minted stablecoins are not universally welcomed as a benign liquidity injection. Critics and some analysts argue that aggressive issuance can obscure where demand is truly coming from and can mask underlying deleveraging. The difference between minting to meet genuine customer deposits and minting to supply speculative demand matters for market stability. In addition, regulatory scrutiny is rising: S&P Global Ratings recently flagged concerns about Tether’s transparency and reserve mix, underlining that questions over backing and disclosure can have outsized implications when the industry leans on ever-larger supplies of dollar-pegged tokens.
Why Solana?
The choice of Solana as the chain for large parts of Circle’s recent minting activity is notable. Solana’s high throughput and low fees make it perfect for moving big chunks of stablecoin quickly. That rush of USDC helps cement Solana as a go-to hub for stablecoin activity and DeFi liquidity, but it also creates a worry: when so much dollar-backed supply funnels through one chain, any slowdown or outage can quickly ripple through markets and cause real headaches for users and traders.
For traders and desks, freshly minted USDC often acts as a short-term catalyst, a source of dry powder to be deployed into markets. But for regulators, commentators and some institutional participants, the surge in issuance revives longer-term questions about transparency, reserve quality, and systemic risk in an ecosystem increasingly dependent on two dominant issuers. As the market digests the latest mints, participants will be watching whether the new supply translates into sustained buying pressure for risky assets or simply shuttles between exchanges and custody providers as liquidity is rebased.
Circle has not issued extended commentary beyond standard issuance records and blockchain explorers that log the fresh tokens; Tether likewise publishes balance and reserve details on its site. For now, on-chain scanners, independent trackers and market participants will continue to parse transaction flows to understand whether this wave of minting signals institutional re-entry, retail rotation, or merely technical liquidity management in the aftermath of the October drawdown.
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