Circle CFO Jeremy Fox-Geen recently announced that the stablecoin issuer had started investing in the Circle Reserve Fund.
The Circle Reserve Fund is managed by BlackRock, which qualifies Circle as an indirect investor in the government money market fund. The reserve will comprise 20% cash held at the Bank of New York Mellon, and 90% short-term U.S. Treasuries.
Fox-Green said that the reserve fund will increase investors’ confidence in the stability and redeemability of their USDC holdings, 1:1 for U.S. dollars at any time.
Circle said that it will convert all its existing Treasury holdings into the Circle Reserve Fund by the end of March 2023.
Circle to get indirect access to Fed’s RRP
Barclays Strategist Joseph Abate wrote that BlackRock plans to use Circle’s Reserve Fund to apply for access to the Federal Reserve’s overnight reverse repurchase (RRP) facility.
A reverse repurchase (RRP) is a monetary instrument that allows the Federal Reserve to sell a security to an eligible party, with an agreement to repurchase the same security at a later date.
The RRP access will give Circle indirect access to a risk-free central bank liability.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire said in a CNBC interview that his company was looking to become a full reserve digital bank.
According to Allaire, Circle was open to being a Federal Reserve-supervised entity if that will fast-track its journey to becoming a full reserve digital bank.
https://www.cryptonews.net/news/altcoins/17379529/
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So it seems that the circle supported USDC stablecoin is gaining support from the bank of new york mellon. Interestingly, new york recently banned crypto mining. Yet appears to support USDC and is paving the way towards it being supported by the federal reserve's RRP program to provide a type of insurance and intrinsic backing support.
Circle itself has invested in crypto for many years. I think one of its first acts was to buy poloniex crypto exchange around 2018. There were rumors that circle was funded by and acted as a subsidiary of goldman sachs. That was around the time big institutional investors first noticed crypto and began seeking ways to enter the market.
Its hard for me to guess how popular USDC might be considering the institutional nature of its intrinsic backing. Its essentially what tether (USDT) would be if the federal reserve guaranteed each coin could be redeemed for $1. Which could give it an advantage.
If USDC is available in foreign markets, it could become popular as a hedge against local inflation. As USDT was rumored to have done, recently.