Shares in Circle Internet Group closed with a 10.7% gain on Wednesday after the stablecoin issuer partnered with Brazilian fintech Matera to support multicurrency bank payments, while its flagship stablecoin USDC also went live on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s World Chain.
World, formerly Worldcoin,saidon Wednesday that around 2 million of its users heldbridgedUSDCUSDC$0.9997USDCChange (24h)0.02%Market Cap$52.17BVolume (24h)$6.37BView More, a type of cryptocurrency that represents value ported across from another blockchain, which is “now upgraded to native USDC issued directly by Circle.”
Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol, which allows USDC to be quickly transferred across blockchain, also went live for World’s 27 million users, who joined the network by scanning their eyes to prove they’re humans.
World said that users had been using USDC on the network for remittances and in Mini Apps, which provide tools for payments and e-commerce, among other things.
Circle and Matera link up for bank payments
Meanwhile, Brazil’s Materasaidon Wednesday that it partnered with Circle to allow the country’s banks to support multicurrency accounts.
Matera said it will use its real-time ledger, Digital Twin, to allow financial institutions to hold Circle’s USDC directly and have Brazilian reals, US dollars and thestablecoinin the same environment “without requiring institutions to build complex infrastructure from scratch.”
The solution will also connect to local payment rails, including the Central Bank of Brazil’s real-time payment system Pix, and would allow USDC to be used in transactions and transfers.
“Interoperability between stablecoins and local currency accounts is no longer a side project — it’s now at the heart of the financial system,” Matera CEO Carlos Netto said. “This is a game-changer for banks and fintechs looking to operate globally with near-instant settlement and low costs.”
Circle shares jump over 10%
Shares in Circle (CRCL) closed trading on Wednesday up nearly 10.7% with news of the two deals, falling after-hours by 0.2% to just under $117,accordingto Yahoo Finance.
The stablecoin issuerwent public in the USon June 5 in an upsized offering, and its stock price has since surged by nearly 280% since it kicked off trading at $31.
World made US debut in April
World was founded in 2019 by the San Francisco and Berlin-based Tools for Humanity but onlylaunched to US usersat the end of April, debuting in six cities: Atlanta, Austin, Los Angeles, Miami, Nashville and San Francisco.
Related:US senators question Meta’s stablecoin plans amid GENIUS Act debate
World Chain users who verify their identity via scanning their face and eyes with the company’s mirrored spherical device called an Orb are given the blockchain’s crypto token, WorldcoinWLD$1.16WorldcoinChange (24h)0.78%Market Cap$128.87MVolume (24h)$186.01MView More, as a reward.
World had skirted launching in the US due to regulatory concerns over offering the token, which it has now seemingly put aside under the crypto-friendly Trump administration.
The company has faced probes from regulators outside the US over privacy concerns, and some jurisdictions, including Spain and Portugal, had suspended World’s activities in their countries over its data collection practices.
Read more:AI Eye: AI is good for employment says PWC — Ignore the AI doomers
Explore more articles like this
Subscribe to our Crypto Biz newsletter
Weekly snapshot of key business trends in blockchain and crypto, from startup buzz to regulatory shifts. Gain valuable insights to navigate the market and spot financial opportunities. Delivered every Thursday
By subscribing, you agree to ourTerms of Services and Privacy Policy