Circle Internet Group (CRCL) shares moved higher in pre-market trading after the company introduced Arc Privacy, a confidential smart contract engine for institutional finance. CRCL traded at $81.27 before the open, up 2.99%, after closing at $78.93, down 2.68%. The update strengthens Circle’s Arc blockchain strategy as banks and payment firms seek private onchain settlement tools.
Circle Internet Group, CRCL

Circle said Arc Privacy aims to solve a major barrier for regulated firms using public blockchains. Most public networks expose transaction data, wallet activity, and smart contract states by default. Therefore, banks and enterprises often avoid moving sensitive financial workflows fully onchain.
The new engine allows developers and businesses to hide selected transaction details and contract states. However, Circle said authorized parties can still review private data for audits, compliance checks, and internal controls. This structure gives institutions confidentiality without removing oversight from approved teams.
Arc Privacy remains optional across the Arc ecosystem, so businesses can choose where privacy applies. As a result, some workflows can stay public while sensitive operations remain protected. Circle said this model supports both transparency and confidentiality across institutional blockchain applications.
Circle identified payroll, treasury management, trading, lending, and tokenized assets as key use cases. Companies could run payroll across multiple regions without exposing salaries, recipients, or treasury outflows. Meanwhile, finance teams could still retain controlled access for records and approvals.
Treasury platforms could move funds without revealing counterparties, balances, or operating patterns to the market. In addition, derivatives traders could protect positions and trading activity from public view. This could reduce risks linked to real-time visibility on transparent blockchains.
Circle also said lending markets and consumer payments could benefit from selective privacy. Borrowers and lenders could avoid exposing collateral activity, while USDC users could protect payment histories. Still, compliance teams and approved auditors could access records when required.
Circle introduced Arc as a public blockchain for institutional finance earlier this year. The network uses USDC as its native gas token and supports EVM compatibility. It also includes sub-second finality, opt-in privacy, and quantum-resistant architecture.
In May, Circle raised $222 million through a presale of the ARC token. The sale valued the network at a fully diluted valuation of $3 billion. Backers included Andreessen Horowitz, BlackRock, Apollo Funds, ARK Invest, Haun Ventures, ICE and Standard Chartered Ventures.
More than 100 organizations have also participated in Arc’s testnet program, according to Circle. Participants included State Street, Deutsche Bank, BlackRock, Goldman Sachs and Visa. The broader plan positions Arc as infrastructure for banks, fintechs, asset issuers, and treasury platforms moving financial activity onchain.
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