
Stablecoin issuer Circle Internet Group (ticker: CRCL) fell 9.9% on Thursday on the Nasdaq, closing at $85.10. A research firm, Compass Point, downgraded CRCL to “Sell,” setting a price target of $77; an investigation into a class action lawsuit stemming from the hack incident involving the decentralized exchange Drift Protocol surfaced on the same day.
(Source: Yahoo Finance)
This time, Compass Point cut CRCL from “Neutral” to “Sell.” The $77 price target still leaves roughly 9% downside from Thursday’s closing price of $85.10, reflecting the firm’s cautious assessment of Circle’s mid-term business outlook.
Compass Point (bearish): Rating “Sell,” price target $77, saying regulatory risk and deteriorating market sentiment create real pressure
Bernstein (relatively optimistic): Believes market concerns are being exaggerated, pointing out that USDC adoption continues to rise, reserve income is strong, and core business fundamentals have not been shaken
It is worth noting that CRCL shares rose significantly between February and March due to higher stablecoin adoption, and this pullback also partly reflects market behavior of taking profits after reaching high levels, rather than being driven entirely by worsening fundamentals.
This week, an investigation into a class action lawsuit related to the Drift Protocol exploit officially kicked off. Injured investors were urged to contact the Gibbs Mura law firm in Oakland, California, to assess possible legal avenues for recovery. Losses estimated from this incident are as high as $280 million.
Circle was not directly involved in this hacked incident, but one key detail has sparked widespread market discussion: after the attack, Drift’s attacker transferred the stolen assets to USDC. As a result, observers have speculated whether Circle should take freezing action against the related addresses. Circle ultimately did not make a freeze decision, but the public discussion surrounding the issue has, at the market level, heightened awareness of counterparty risk for DeFi platforms, and has also created indirect downward pressure on CRCL’s stock price through sentiment transmission.
In addition to the short-term events above, Circle also faces ongoing pressure from the regulatory side. Progress on U.S. market-structure legislation has stalled, and the compliance pathway for stablecoins remains unclear; banking industry groups continue lobbying against yield-bearing stablecoins entering a legal framework, directly limiting the potential expansion space for USDC’s business model. Compass Point’s rating downgrade is a comprehensive judgment made after incorporating the structural risks above into the overall assessment, rather than simply responding to short-term stock-price volatility.
CRCL is the stock ticker for Circle Internet Group on the Nasdaq. Circle is the world’s largest issuer of the dollar stablecoin USDC. Its core revenue comes from interest generated by holding USDC reserve assets (mainly U.S. Treasury bills). Performance is highly dependent on interest-rate levels and the market circulation size of USDC.
Compass Point’s downgrade assessment includes multiple negative factors, such as the stalling of U.S. market-structure legislation, continued lobbying by banks against yield-bearing stablecoins, and the indirect impact of the Drift Protocol exploit incident on market sentiment. A $77 price target implies about 9% downside from current levels.
Circle was not directly involved in the Drift Protocol hack incident, but the hacker’s move to transfer stolen assets to USDC sparked market debate over whether Circle should intervene with a freeze. Although Circle did not take action, this controversy strengthened investors’ awareness of counterparty risk on DeFi platforms and, through sentiment transmission in the market, created selling pressure on publicly traded stablecoin-related stocks.