U.S. lenders will get relaxed capital proposals from regulators in the coming week, the Federal Reserve’s top bank cop said Thursday, in a move applauded by the banking industry.
U.S. Fed to unveil relaxed bank capital proposal in coming week
Palantir CEO Alex Karp on Anthropic-DoD feud: ‘Never a sense’ AI could be used for U.S. surveillance
Right in the middle of the ongoing feud between the Silicon Valley AI company Anthropic and the U.S. Department of Defense over whether the military will use—or not use—Anthropic’s large language models is yet another company: Palantir.
Palantir, the Miami-based data analytics and artificial intelligence platform, is a key software provider for the Department of Defense—and the main channel by which the Department has been using Anthropic’s large language model, Claude.
“We are legitimately still in the middle of all this,” CEO Alex Karp said in an interview with Fortune on the sidelines of the company’s twice-a-year AIP conference on Thursday. “It’s our stack that runs the LLMs.”
Karp says he had been in numerous discussions with all parties involved—discussions he declined to give specifics about, as he says he doesn’t want to “out conversations” or “bash people.”
But Karp does want to make one thing clear: The Defense Department is not using AI for domestic mass surveillance on U.S. citizens—and, to his knowledge, it has no plans to.
“Without commenting on internal dialogs, there was never a sense that these products would be used domestically,” Karp said. “The Department of War is not planning to use these products domestically. That’s a completely different kettle of fish… The terms the Department of War wants are completely focused on non-American citizens in a war context.”
Palantir has a vast business doing work for the U.S. government, including the DoD. Anthropic partnered with Palantir in 2024 to offer its AI technology to the DoD via Palantir. Anthropic also began working directly with the DoD last year to create a version of its technology designed for the Defense Department.
The contentious back-and-forth between Anthropic and the Defense Department has been ongoing since around January, and the two sides don’t agree on what set it off. Statements that Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Emil Michael made last week allege that Palantir had notified the Pentagon that Anthropic was inquiring about whether its models had been used for the U.S. military mission to capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. (Anthropic has refuted this characterization, asserting it hasn’t discussed the use of Claude for specific operations “with any industry partners, including Palantir, outside of routine discussions on strictly technical matters”). Ever since, the two sides have been locked in a fight over whether Anthropic can write contractual limits on how its models are used.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has published multiple blog posts on the matter, including an initial statement at the end of February asserting that the Defense Department had refused to accept safeguards that its LLMs not be used for domestic mass surveillance or the deployment of fully autonomous weapons. Pete Hegseth, the Secretary of Defense, later designated Anthropic a “supply-chain risk,” threatening many of the company’s commercial relationships, and prompting Anthropic to sue the Pentagon over the designation.
‘Totally in favor’ of domestic terms of engagement
Palantir, which was funded by the CIA’s venture capital arm early on and whose software has been used in counter-terrorism efforts abroad, has long been accused of helping government and intelligence agencies spy on civilians and potential domestic suspects. Karp has repeatedly rebutted such claims for over a decade and has spoken about the importance of setting technical guardrails around technology that could be used in the U.S. for domestic surveillance. Palantir early on created a “Privacy and Civil Liberties” team—an interdisciplinary group of engineers, lawyers, philosophers, and social scientists—tasked with building privacy‑protective features into its products and fostering a culture of responsible use. The team helped set up internal channels, including an ethics hotline, for employees to flag work they viewed as crossing ethical lines.
Civil liberties groups, however, continue to accuse the company of doing the opposite—by helping the government surveil. The company’s relationship with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, in particular, which began under the Obama Administration, has invited intense scrutiny and criticism from both external critics and the company’s own employees—criticism that has only escalated over the last year as the Trump Administration has pushed ICE into an aggressive crackdown in cities like Minneapolis.
Karp told Fortune he is “very sympathetic with arguments against using these products inside the U.S.” and said that he is “totally in favor” of setting terms of engagement and limits to how domestic agencies can use artificial intelligence.
“Quite frankly, I think we should self-impose them,” Karp said of these terms of engagement. “The Valley should have a consortium: This is what we’re going to do, and this is what we’re not going to do,” he said.
But Karp drew a sharp distinction between whether tech companies should set terms with domestic agencies and whether they should set them with the Department of Defense, which is primarily focused on managing the United States’ relationships with other countries and its adversaries.
“What we’re talking about now is using products vis-a-vis someone who’s trying to kill our service members,” Karp said, noting that he personally supports “wide license” of usage for the Department of Defense specifically.
“If we knew China and Russia and Iran wouldn’t build them, I would be in favor of very heavy—very heavy—legal constraints,” Karp said. But he points out that American adversaries will build them and use them against the U.S. anyway. “I don’t think this is an opinion. I think this is a fact, and that fact means I think the Department of War should have wide license to use these products.”
4 Things Landlords Are Responsible For When Renting to Tenants
This article is presented by Steadily.
Most real estate investors can tell you their ROI down to two decimal places. They can walk you through their expense ratio and their five-year appreciation projection without blinking.
But ask them about their landlord responsibilities? Silence. And that silence is expensive.
I’ve seen some version of this happen more times than I can count: A landlord spends weeks finding the right deal, negotiates a great price, gets their financing in order, and closes with confidence. Then, six months later, they are hit with a habitability complaint, a Fair Housing violation notice, or a liability claim they had no idea was coming. Not because they were reckless, but because nobody ever handed them a clear picture of what being a landlord actually requires.
This post is that picture. Think of it as a self-audit, a plain-English walkthrough of the four categories of landlord responsibility that determine whether your investment is truly protected or just looks that way on paper.
Responsibility No. 1: Habitability
The moment a tenant signs a lease, you are legally bound by something called the Warranty of Habitability. You do not have to write it into the contract, it is implied by law in virtually every state. And it says one thing clearly: the property you are renting out must meet basic safety and living standards before and throughout the tenancy.
What does that actually mean in practice? Habitability covers more ground than most landlords assume. At a minimum, you are responsible for:
- Structural integrity. Foundation, walls, roof, windows, and doors must be sound and secure.
- Working systems. Electrical, plumbing, and HVAC must function. In states like Arizona, functional air conditioning is a legal requirement due to heat risk.
- Pest control. Infestations are your problem to solve, not the tenant’s.
- Mold remediation. If there is mold, you must address both the mold and the moisture source causing it.
- Smoke and carbon monoxide detectors. Each state sets specific requirements for quantity and placement.
- Common area safety. Stairwells, parking lots, laundry rooms, and shared spaces need proper lighting, secure handrails, and maintained conditions.
The self-audit question that guides you should be: when did someone last physically inspect each of those items at your property?
If the answer is “I am not sure,” that is a gap. And when a habitability complaint hits, “I am not sure” does not hold up in front of a judge. Tenants have legal remedies that range from withholding rent to terminating the lease to suing for damages. The cost of a single habitability lawsuit dwarfs the cost of a quarterly inspection.
Responsibility No. 2: Ongoing Property Maintenance
Habitability may be the legal floor, but maintenance is what keeps you from falling through it.
A lot of landlords treat maintenance as purely reactive. Something breaks; they fix it. That approach is not wrong exactly, it is just incomplete. And incomplete maintenance habits are one of the fastest ways to turn a small issue into an expensive insurance claim – or worse, an uninsured one.
The thing insurance companies know that most landlords do not is that a high percentage of claims are traceable to deferred maintenance. A roof leak that started as a missing shingle, a water damage claim that began with a clogged gutter three seasons ago, or a liability lawsuit from a cracked walkway that someone pointed out in a maintenance request eight months earlier. These are all common and costly maintenance errors.
Your ongoing maintenance obligations go beyond fixing things when tenants call. They include:
- Paying the mortgage on time. Obvious, but worth stating. At 90 days past due, foreclosure can begin.
- Managing utilities. Any utility in your name must be paid. Some municipalities can place liens on your property for unpaid utility bills.
- Scheduling preventive maintenance. HVAC servicing, roof inspections, gutter cleaning, dryer vent cleaning, and exterior walk-throughs should be on a calendar, not waiting for a problem.
- Documenting everything. Invoices, photos, and inspection reports. This documentation is your evidence that you operated the property responsibly. Without it, you have no defense.
The self-audit question here is direct: Do you have a scheduled maintenance calendar for each property, or are you operating on a “wait and see” basis?
Proactive maintenance does two things for you: it preserves the asset, and it builds a documented track record that protects you when something goes sideways despite your best efforts.
Responsibility No. 3: Legal Compliance
This is the category most landlords underestimate, and unfortunately, it is also the one with the steepest penalties.
Legal compliance in property management is not just about avoiding evictions. It covers how you advertise, how you screen, how you handle money, and how you communicate. Get any of it wrong, and you are looking at fines, lawsuits, or both.
The Fair Housing Act
The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in the rental process based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, and disability. Violations do not have to be intentional. An ad that says “great for young professionals” can be read as discriminating against families. A policy that bans all pets without a written exemption process for emotional support animals violates the FHA’s disability clause.
First-offense civil penalties can reach $16,000. Repeat violations climb fast. And HUD complaints are not rare.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act
Every time you run a background check, credit check, or pull rental history on an applicant, you are operating under FCRA rules. You must get written permission before running reports. You must protect that data. And if you deny an applicant based on what you found, you must provide a standardized adverse action notice explaining why.
Skipping that step is not just sloppy; it’s a federal violation.
Security deposits, lead paint, and right-to-entry
Security deposits are governed differently in every state. Some states cap the amount at one or two months’ rent. Many require the deposit to be held in a separate account. Most set a deadline for returning funds after move-out, typically 14 to 60 days. Miss that deadline or make improper deductions, and you may owe the tenant two or three times the original deposit.
If your property was built before 1978, you are required by federal law to provide every tenant with a lead paint disclosure before they sign – no exceptions.
Right-to-entry rules also vary by state. Some require 24 hours’ notice before you can enter for a non-emergency. Others require 48 or 72 hours. A few states allow landlords to enter without warning under certain circumstances. Entering without proper notice, even for legitimate maintenance, can give a tenant legal grounds to break the lease.
Self-audit question: When did you last review your lease language and screening process against current federal and state law?
Responsibility No. 4: State-Specific Rules That Change Everything
Here is something that catches out-of-state investors especially hard: what is perfectly legal landlord behavior in one state is a violation in the next one.
Arkansas allows landlords to enter a property without prior notice. California requires a minimum of 24 hours. Kentucky caps small claims court at $2,500. Delaware allows up to $25,000. Some states require security deposits to earn interest. Others have no such rule. Eviction timelines, late fee limits, rent increase notice periods, and move-out inspection requirements all differ by state, and sometimes by city within a state.
If you own property in more than one market, you cannot apply the same playbook across all of them. And if you have not checked whether your state updated its landlord-tenant statutes recently, you may already be out of compliance without knowing it.
The self-audit question: Do you have a current, state-specific understanding of your obligations for every market where you own property?
If the answer is no, that is not unusual. But it is a real gap. Start with your state’s landlord-tenant statutes and run them against your current lease and operating procedures. Bring in a local real estate attorney if anything is unclear.
You Can Do Everything Right and Still Take a Hit
So you ran the self-audit. You checked the habitability boxes. Your maintenance is scheduled and documented. Your lease is compliant with state and federal law. You know your right-to-entry rules and your security deposit deadlines.
That is genuinely solid. Most landlords are not operating at that level.
But here is the part nobody likes to say out loud: Compliance and maintenance reduce your risk, but they do not eliminate it.
A tenant gets injured despite your best efforts. A storm causes damage that your standard homeowners policy does not cover because the property is a rental. You lose three months of rent while a vacancy drags on after a covered loss. A vendor working on your property files a claim, and the liability boomerangs back to you.
These scenarios happen to landlords who did everything right. And when they do, the financial exposure lands directly on the property owner, not the tenant, not the property manager, not the city.
That is exactly where your insurance strategy has to close the gap that compliance alone cannot.
And if you are still carrying a standard homeowners policy on a rental property, I want to be direct with you: that policy was not written for landlords. It does not cover loss of rent. It may not cover tenant-caused damage. Perhaps most importantly in the context of this article, it does not cover liability claims that come from tenants.
Homeowners insurance was built for owner-occupants, not investors. This is the gap that Steadily was built to fill.
Steadily is landlord insurance coverage designed specifically for real estate investors. Not adapted from a homeowner product, nor pieced together from commercial lines. The products are built from the ground up for people who own rental properties and need coverage that actually matches how they operate.
Here is what that means practically:
- Loss of rent coverage. If a covered event makes your property uninhabitable, Steadily helps replace the rental income you lose while repairs are underway.
- Liability protection. If a tenant or guest is injured on your property, your landlord policy covers legal costs and damages in ways a standard homeowners policy may not.
- Property damage coverage. Fire, storms, vandalism, and more, with coverage calibrated for rental properties, not owner-occupied homes.
- Coverage for all rental types. Single-family homes, multifamily, and short-term rentals like Airbnb. Steadily covers them all nationwide.
- Fast quotes with no paperwork nightmare. Investors can get a quote in minutes, not days. Whether you own one door or fifty, the process is built to move at the pace of your business.
Think about it this way. You just ran a checklist of your four core landlord responsibilities. You identified where your systems are solid and where the gaps are. That same mindset needs to apply to your insurance. When did you last audit your coverage the same way you just audited your compliance?
Most landlords have not. They got a policy when they bought the property and have not looked at it since. That is fine when nothing goes wrong. When something does, that is when the policy details matter.
Steadily makes that audit easy. Their team works specifically with real estate investors, which means they understand what you are protecting and can match your coverage to your actual risk profile, not a generic homeowner template.
Time to Close the Final Gap
You have done the work on compliance. Now do the same for your coverage. Get a fast, free landlord insurance quote from Steadily today at Steadily.com. It takes five minutes. And it might be the most important thing you do for your portfolio this quarter.
[Not Live; YMMV] Amazon: $200 Select Giftcards For $180 (Netflix, Chipotle, Airbnb, Southwest, Ulta & Many More)
The Offer
Direct Link to offer | Other gift card deals
- Amazon is running a $20 discount on many gift card brands when you buy a total of $200 from the following gift card brands:
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Netflix, Ulta Beauty, Chipotle, Barnes & Noble, Airbnb, Nordstrom, Darden Restaurants, Taco Bell, Texas Roadhouse, Carnival Cruise Lines, LongHorn Steakhouse, Southwest Airlines, Chili’s, LEGO, Bass Pro Shops, Old Navy, AMC Theatres, Buffalo Wild Wings, Victoria’s Secret, Michaels, The Cheesecake Factory, Cracker Barrel, TJ Maxx, HomeGoods, Topgolf, Outback Steakhouse, StubHub, Jersey Mike’s, Fandango, Cabela’s, PINK Victoria’s Secret, Bloomin’ Brands, Marshalls, Epic Games, Hollister.
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- There are numerous other gift card deals still available, which we discussed in this prior post, including Lowe’s, Hotels.com and many more.
Our Verdict
Nice savings here. Seems to only show on select Amazon accounts – I see it on my regular Amazon account but not on my backup account. Try stacking with the Shop With Points deal from Discover.
I can’t get this to actually work at checkout on Amazon. Not sure if it’s just upcoming or if I’m doing something wrong.
U.S. debt is like a Hallmark movie boyfriend who eventually gets dumped, budget watchdog warns
This rom-com formula is now a staple of holiday TV programming: a busy professional from the big city goes back home for Christmas and falls for a local guy after admitting her current boyfriend wasn’t her true soul mate.
According to Martha Gimbel, executive director of the Yale Budget Lab, this trope could also describe the bond market’s feelings about U.S. debt.
During a Senate hearing this week, she was asked what might trigger a debt crisis and why it hasn’t happened yet despite the explosion of borrowing in recent years. Gimbel replied it’s basic supply and demand, and investors are settling for the easier option, even if it doesn’t meet all their needs—they simply don’t have a better option right now, but that may not always be the case.
“The way that I sort of put it is we are currently the boyfriend at the beginning of the Hallmark movie in the big city where the girlfriend is still going out with him even though she knows that it’s wrong,” she explained. “But at some point she’s gonna go home to the small town and find the nice firefighter and realize that there’s another option.”
For now, as Gimbel explained, investors are settling for the status quo, but it’s only a matter of time before we hit a Sleepless in Stagflation moment and investors find better options. Much like a would-be suitor exaggerating how big their heart is, publicly held debt is pretty substantially—it already is as large as the U.S. GDP, and it will exceed the all-time record set after World War II in the comings years. Publicly held debt then will continue marching higher with no sign of abating as retiring baby boomers drive up entitlement spending.
Like the big-shot professional visiting the small town, treasury bonds are still in high demand, especially for now as a safe-haven asset, despite all the turmoil from President Donald Trump lately. The U.S. debt market remains by far the largest and most liquid, underpinned by the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency.
While Gimbel said she doesn’t know when U.S. debt will fall out of favor, the eurozone has been trying to make its debt more appealing to investors.
Europe is a top holder of U.S. debt, so any shift away from Treasuries could worsen the outlook by sending yields higher and adding to borrowing costs.
In 2021, Europe launched the Next Generation EU borrowing program financed through joint debt issuance. While intended as a pandemic-era stimulus program, the breakthrough measure was seen as boosting the euro’s status as reserve asset.
To be sure, other countries also have safe haven assets, including Germany and Scandinavia. But individually, their debt and currency markets aren’t big enough to fill the needs of global finance.
Gimbel pointed out that investors have piled into Switzerland lately, adding that the U.S. is fortunate that Swiss financial markets can’t absorb that much capital.
Helped by low debt levels and a reputation as a secure financial hub, Switzerland has long been seen as a safe haven. That sent the Swiss franc soaring 12.7% against the dollar last year as Trump’s trade war jolted markets. It shot up further this year after Trump threatened to seize Greenland from Denmark.
The war on Iran could worsen the U.S. debt outlook as additional military spending adds to the deficit, while higher bond yields due to oil-fueled inflation translate to bigger interest costs.
“The more we make ourselves less attractive to markets, the more likely it is that you will have a fiscal crisis,” Gimbel warned. “We are literally relying on the fact that markets have no place to go.”
Pi Day 2026 Includes Deals, Freebies at Blaze Pizza, Burger King, More
What better way to celebrate one of mathematics’ most well-known symbols than with an actual slice of pie?
On Pi Day, Saturday, March 14 (3.14, get it?), restaurants across the country are getting ready to celebrate it with deals and promotions that make saving some money as easy as, well, pie.
Pi is an irrational number, meaning it goes on forever and has been calculated to over a trillion digits, according to NASA. Some might know it as 3.14 (hence the date of National Pi Day), or its symbol, π. It’s used in equations and math problems to find the measurements involving circles, spheres, and cylinders.
Fortunately, some of the best foods, pizza pies, apple pies, chicken pot pies, cherry pies, and more, come in pie form! So, restaurants can get pretty punny with their deals.
Here are some deals to look forward to on Pi Day.
7-Eleven
From Friday, March 13, to Saturday, March 14, customers can visit participating 7-Eleven, Speedway, and Stripes locations for a variety of deals.
Pi Day deals include the following, according to a 7-Eleven news release:
- $3.14 for a whole pizza- 7Rewards and Speedy Rewards members can purchase a one-topping pizza for $3.14 through the 7NOW Delivery app and Speedy Café locations. Options also include pizzas with customizable toppings and a three-cheese blend.
- $3.14 for a quesadilla- Participating locations will also sell quesadillas with melted cheese and fillings for the same price.
- 31.4-cent Cinnamon Sugar Fried Pies- What’s Pi Day without some pie? For less than a dollar, customers can purchase Cinnamon Sugar Fried Pies in apple or cherry.
Finally, from March 4 to April 28, customers can also purchase 7-Select Snack Pies for $1.
Perkins Restaurant and Bakery
Perkins Restaurant and Bakery will donate a portion of the proceeds from every banana cream pie sold on March 14 to Punch the Monkey, the monkey who was rejected by his mother, according to a news release. The young monkey went viral after people began posting photos of him walking around his enclosure at the Ichikawa City Zoo in Ichikawa, Japan, carrying an orange orangutan plush.
“Punch’s story resonated with people because it shows how powerful comfort and connection can be,” Matt Carpenter, Brand President of Perkins Restaurant & Bakery, said in a statement. “At Perkins, pie has always been a comfort food. Pi Day gives us the chance to share that comfort with guests while also supporting a meaningful cause.”
The donations will support animal care efforts inspired by Punch.
Customers can also purchase a meal that includes an Angus cheeseburger, fries, and a slice of pie for $10.99, according to the news release.
DoorDash
DoorDash customers can take advantage of the following promotions on Pi Day when they order through the food delivery app:
- Pizza Hut BOGO: Buy one medium or large ‘Create Your Own’ pizza, get one free at participating locations
- Sbarro: Receive $4 off eligible orders that are $20 or more from all participating Sbarro locations. DashPass members can receive $5 off eligible orders that are $25 or more
- Blaze Pizza BOGO: Buy one 11-inch ‘Simple Pie’ cheese pizza, and get another for free when ordering from participating locations from March 14 to April 6
Burger King
Get a free pie at Burger King when you spend at least $3.14 on Pi Day. Customers can choose to receive a Hershey’s Sundae Pie or a Cinnamon Apple Pie.
Crumbl
The popular cookie company Crumbl is offering a sweet deal on Pi Day, giving customers at all its locations a chance to get a bonus pie flavor, according to a new release on Crumbl’s website. The flavor is a surprise and varies by location, so customers will need to check the Secret Menu section on the app.
Other Pi Day deals
Here are some other deals filled with the Pi Day spirit:
- Mountain Mike’s- Mountain Rewards Members can purchase any medium pizza and add a second one-topping medium pizza for $3.14 on March 14.
- Taco Cabana- On March 14, purchase three pies for $3.14 on International Pi Day. Customers can purchase different pies with the deal.
- Round Table Pizza- Royal Rewards Members can purchase a one-topping personal pizza for $3.14 at participating locations on International Pi Day (March 14).
- Blaze Pizza- On Saturday, March 14, buy one 11-Inch pizza, get a second one for $3.14. This deal is available in-store and separate from the Blaze Pizza deal listed above.
- Newk’s Eatery- From Friday, March 13, to Saturday, March 14, guests can purchase a classic pie for $3.14 when they purchase an entree
Julia Gomez is a Trending reporter for USA TODAY and covers popular toys, scientific studies, natural disasters, holidays, and trending news. Connect with her on LinkedIn, X, Instagram, and TikTok: @juliamariegz, or email her at [email protected].
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Pi Day 2026 includes deals, freebies at Blaze Pizza, Burger King, more
Reporting by Julia Gomez, USA TODAY / USA TODAY
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect
Protect YOUR Money! 7 Safest Investments Ranked in 2024
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Disclosures:
All content on this channel is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional financial advice or recommendation to buy or sell any securities. Trading stocks, ETFs, other securities, and/or cryptocurrencies poses a considerable risk of loss. Neither host or guests can be held responsible for any direct or incidental loss incurred by applying any of the information offered. The content of this video is solely the opinions of the speaker who is not a licensed financial advisor or registered investment advisor. Should you need such advice, consult a licensed financial or tax advisor. When you make purchases through links in this video description, the author may earn a commission.
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Circle Says Its Tokenized Money Market Fund Is Largest In The World
Tokenized assets will eventually become the norm. But growth has been slower than many predicted, largely due regulatory delays or political subterfuge.
One area that should see quick adoption is the tokenization of Money Market Funds, low risk holdings of highly liquid assets that tend to generate a stable return for holder. Yesterday, digital asset firm Circle (NASDAQ:CRCL) issued the claim they are now the largest in the market offering tokenized MMFs.
Circle’s MMF is USYC which was acquired from Hashnote in 2025, has now exceeded $2 billion in assets under management, surpassing competitor BlackRock’s BUIDL as the world’s largest tokenized fund.
The yield for USYC, which reflect shares in the Hashnote International Short Duration Yield Fund Ltd. is around 3.20% net of fees.
The fund primarily invests in short term U.S. Treasury bills and reverse repurchase agreements backed by U.S. government securities.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire commented on X:
“Tokenized treasuries and repo as collateral is a major emerging use case and we are proud of how quickly this has grown. What’s especially powerful about USYC is the ability to 24/7/365 create and redeem it using USDC and a smart contract teller. Real-time money and collateral is better.”
As USYC is not yet available to retail investors, once this changes, demand should jump.
Have a crowdfunding offering you’d like to share? Submit an offering for consideration using our Submit a Tip form and we may share it on our site!
Why Circle Should Outperform Coinbase
Both Circle Internet Group (CRCL 0.32%) and Coinbase (COIN +1.18%) have been down recently, particularly in light of the market’s bearishness since last fall. It’s a buying opportunity for both, but does that mean both are equally good buys? Let’s find out.
Crypto exchange meets stablecoin minter
Circle and Coinbase are closely related, both operating in the crypto space. Coinbase is a major crypto exchange. Most revenue comes from transaction-based fees from crypto trading, with recurring subscriptions accounting for a smaller but growing share.
Circle mints stablecoins through a process of tokenization. Circle takes a real asset, like the US dollar, and create a token of it on the blockchain. Its primary product is USDC and earns revenue from short-term interest on the real USD it keeps in reserve. USDC is the second-largest USD stablecoin, after USDT. With these things in common, Coinbase was one of Circle’s first major distributors, and it shares in the interest earned on USD.
Both provide software-based financial services and benefit from wider adoption of blockchain technology.
Why both were down recently
Their stocks began to decline in the fall of 2025 and continued to do so into 2026. The initial catalyst was President Trump’s announcement of new tariffs on China on October 10, 2025. It triggered a sharp reaction in the crypto market. As this drove many out, there has been less activity and optimism, which has kept the prices of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies from rising. Coinbase, in particular, depends on trading activity for most of its revenue.
January also saw debate emerge over the CLARITY Act. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has been highly critical of early drafts of the bill, as current law does not allow stablecoin issuers to pass through interest to customers, much as banks do with savings accounts. Sharing interest income means less near-term revenue for Circle, but it could also greatly accelerate adoption.
Why CRCL Should Outperform COIN
I believe that both should prove to be profitable investments in the long term. As it stands, both businesses are profitable and have healthy balance sheets at the end of 2025. Coinbase reported $11.2 billion in cash and $7.9 billion in debt, while Circle reported $1.5 billion in cash with no debt. Coinbase even announced in the earnings release that it was expanding its buyback program in response to the depressed share price; it isn’t hurting for cash.
Today’s Change
(1.18%) $2.28
Current Price
$195.51
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$51B
Day’s Range
$194.81 – $207.13
52wk Range
$139.36 – $444.64
Volume
500K
Avg Vol
12M
Gross Margin
79.57%
Nevertheless, I think Circle’s business model makes it more accretive over time, shown by resilience in USDC’s market cap, which is the total volume of USDC. Despite the negatives, it did not decline after the summer’s euphoric rise associated with the GENIUS Act like much of crypto did. It stands above $70B since passing it in 2025, giving a larger USD reserve to yield interest for Circle. Growth should continue as uses cases expand.
For example, Polymarket, one of the leading prediction market platforms, has partnered with Circle. They announced earlier this month that all transactions would be done directly with USDC, reflecting trust in Circle’s product. While Coinbase provides a platform to get into crypto, Polymarket demonstrates how smart contracts on the blockchain are valuable and trusts USDC as the medium of exchange for those contracts.

Today’s Change
(-0.32%) $-0.37
Current Price
$113.81
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$28B
Day’s Range
$113.55 – $119.30
52wk Range
$31.00 – $298.99
Volume
8.6M
Avg Vol
14M
Gross Margin
5.88%
Coinbase aims to become an “everything exchange,” to reduce dependence on Bitcoin trades. It wants to be an exchange that capitalizes on tokenization of real-world assets, but exchanges remain competitive. As October showed, customers can feel burned and betrayed, never to return. Coinbase still allows leverage ratios of up to 50x, which can cause liquidations and permanently lose customers’ assets.
Circle faces less competition, its only major contender being Tether. As stablecoins are the medium through which crypto transactions settle, their use case is likely to grow, particularly as more business and platforms (like Polymarket) seek to utilize smart contracts and lean on USDC to make those happen. Interest rate cycles affect the yield on USD reserves, but a paradigm shift into blockchain-based finance would dwarf these near-term considerations.
Circle takes the square!
Both Circle and Coinbase are profitable companies operating in the crypto space. As public companies, they are among the most transparent in this space too. A shift into tokenization would grow the top lines of either company. Yet, Coinbase revenue is primarily transaction fees from crypto trading, which is cyclical and ultimately doesn’t unlock the potential of blockchain technology.
Circle generates yield when customers put cash on chain. That is Circle’s advantage. The more that finance moves on chain, the more Circle accretes, and I think resilience of USDC’s market cap speaks to this. While I expect both will prove to be good investments over time, I think Circle is in a better position to accrete value over time.
