Circle’s buzzy IPO was a big hit. Now comes hard part.
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Circle, the company behind the $61 billion stablecoin USDC, made a roaring debut on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday, becoming the first stablecoin issuer to go public and making CEO and cofounder Jeremy Allaire a billionaire.
The significant surge in Circle’s first-day trading could prompt institutional investors to set higher IPO prices for upcoming listings. Imminent IPOs include Omada Health, which is pricing on Thursday, and Klarna, a fintech that’s set to list next week.
(Reuters) -Circle Internet's shares were set for a strong debut on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, a move expected to boost an IPO market that has struggled to regain momentum. The stock was last indicated to trade between $60 and $61 at debut compared with its IPO price of $31.
Due to high demand, the stablecoin issuer increased its IPO from a planned 24 million shares. Circle is now worth anywhere from $6.8 billion to $8 billion on a fully diluted value. The company that powers the USDC stablecoin will start trading today on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol CRCL.
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This week’s blockbuster IPO of Circle, a leading issuer of stablecoins, shows how crypto is increasingly going mainstream. Here’s how to invest.
While Wall Street insiders enjoyed a first day "pop," it appears Circle could have pocketed much more from its debut.
The cryptocurrency company's stock opened for trading on the NYSE at $69 apiece, valuing the stablecoin issuer at nearly $18 billion.
Circle Internet Group Inc.’s white-hot debut on Thursday gives the US IPO market a crypto-fuelled shot of adrenalin that could encourage more listings by would-be debutantes — in the digital assets space and beyond.
Circle’s IPO highlights crypto’s mainstream shift, with USDC driving revenue and new fintech services expanding its reach. Read why CRCL stock is a hold.