Cathie Wood Turns Clarity Act Panic into Profit: $16 Million Circle Buy Already Up $1 Million

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By Rich Duprey Published

Quick Read

  • Circle Internet Group (CRCL) shares fell 20% on news of the Clarity Act’s ban on stablecoin yield for passive holding, but the restriction targets platforms distributing rewards, not Circle’s treasury management of USDC reserves. ARK Invest bought $16.3 million of Circle shares across three flagship ETFs (ARKK, ARKW, ARKF) on the dip, turning a $1.13 million paper profit as the stock rebounded 7%.

  • The market misread the Clarity Act’s intent, conflating yield earned by stablecoin issuers with yield distributed by platforms, when Circle’s core business of managing USDC reserves backed by Treasuries remains legally intact under the bill’s carve-outs for activity-based rewards.

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Cathie Wood Turns Clarity Act Panic into Profit: $16 Million Circle Buy Already Up $1 Million

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Circle Internet Group (NYSE:CRCL) shares plunged nearly 20% on Tuesday after the latest draft of the long-awaited Clarity Act surfaced in Congress. The bill’s new language appeared to ban stablecoin issuers from offering yield simply for users holding tokens like USDC (CRYPTO:USDC), sparking fears that Circle’s core business model could take a hit. 

Investors dumped the stock, dragging other crypto names lower in sympathy. But Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest funds spotted opportunity in the chaos. On the same day, the firm scooped up more than $16 million worth of Circle shares. It now looks like a classic Wood contrarian bet as analysts say the market badly misunderstood the bill’s intent. In morning trading today, Circle’s stock was up around 7% handing Wood’s funds more than $1 million in unrealized gains on the position.

What the Clarity Act Actually Does

The Clarity Act is Congress’s bipartisan push to create a comprehensive U.S. regulatory framework for digital assets. The latest Senate draft, led by Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks, draws a sharp line on stablecoins. It prohibits platforms from paying users “interest-like” yield solely for holding a stablecoin in a wallet or account — anything that could be seen as economically equivalent to a bank deposit. The goal is to protect traditional banking and prevent stablecoins from functioning as unregulated savings vehicles.

Importantly, the bill carves out room for rewards tied to “bona fide activity.” Payments processing, trading, lending, loyalty programs, and other genuine usage incentives would still be allowed. The legislation also directs regulators to finalize rules within a year, giving the industry the regulatory, well, clarity it has long sought. Far from a death blow to stablecoins, the bill aims to legitimize the sector while drawing boundaries that keep it from competing directly with insured bank deposits.

What The Market Got Wrong

Analysts at Bernstein were quick to call out the overreaction. In a note released Tuesday, Gautam Chhugani and colleagues argued that traders are “conflating who earns yield with who distributes yield.” Circle earns yield by investing USDC reserves in short-term Treasuries and other high-quality assets. Coinbase and other exchanges distribute that yield to end users. The Clarity Act’s restrictions target the distribution side — platforms offering passive interest-like rewards — not the issuer’s own treasury management.

Bernstein highlighted the carve-outs for activity-based rewards, which could still let platforms incentivize real usage. “The sell-off may not be calibrated enough,” the analysts wrote. In short, the market priced in a worst-case scenario that the bill’s text does not support. Circle’s fundamental business — issuing the second-largest stablecoin, with reserves transparently backed by cash and Treasuries — remains intact and poised for growth as institutional adoption accelerates.

Wood’s Swift $16.3 Million Bet

While the broader market panicked, Cathie Wood moved decisively. ARK Invest purchased 161,513 shares of Circle across three of its flagship ETFs: the ARK Innovation ETF (CBOE:ARKK), ARK Next Generation Internet ETF (CBOE:ARKW), and ARK Blockchain & Fintech Innovation ETF (CBOE:ARKF). The total outlay came to approximately $16.3 million, based on Circle’s closing price of $101.17 that day.

The purchase reflects Wood’s long-standing bullish stance on Circle and the broader stablecoin ecosystem. ARK has trimmed the position at higher levels in recent weeks but clearly views the 20% plunge as an attractive entry point. The timing was textbook Wood: buy innovation names when fear is highest and regulatory headlines create temporary mispricings. By this morning, the position was already in the green, with the 7% rebound adding roughly $1.13 million in paper profits.

Key Takeaways

Market mispricings like Tuesday’s Clarity Act freak-out create precisely the opportunities savvy investors live for. When fear outruns facts — even on high-profile names like Circle — prices can detach from fundamentals in a matter of hours. Cathie Wood’s $16.3 million deployment shows how quickly disciplined capital can step in, separate signal from noise, and lock in gains when sentiment swings too far.

For retail and institutional investors alike, the lesson is clear: read the bill, not the headline. Regulatory clarity, even when imperfect, often proves far more bullish for innovative sectors than blanket bans. In crypto’s regulatory evolution, volatility is the feature, not the bug — and those who act on analysis rather than emotion are the ones who profit. As Circle Internet Group continues its recovery, Wood’s latest buy stands as a timely reminder that in fast-moving markets, misunderstanding is opportunity.

Photo of Rich Duprey
About the Author Rich Duprey →

After two decades of patrolling the dark corners of suburbia as a police officer, Rich Duprey hung up his badge and gun to begin writing full time about stocks and investing. For the past 20 years he’s been cruising the markets looking for companies to lock up as long-term holdings in a portfolio while writing extensively on the broad sectors of consumer goods, technology, and industrials. Because his experience isn’t from the typical financial analyst track, Rich is able to break down complex topics into understandable and useful action points for the average investor. His writings have appeared on The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, Yahoo! Finance, and Money Morning. He has been interviewed for both U.S. and international publications, including MarketWatch, Financial Times, Forbes, Fast Company, and USA Today.

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