Ark Invest buys $18M in Circle Internet Group shares as stock falls to $61.95

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Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest has a type. High-conviction, high-volatility, buy-the-dip. Circle Internet Group is checking every box.

Ark purchased nearly $18 million worth of Circle shares as CRCL closed at $61.95 on July 1, 2026, down 1.09% on the day. The move is consistent with a pattern Ark has been running since Circle went public: accumulate on weakness, hold through the noise.

The dip-buying playbook

Ark’s most aggressive move came on March 24, 2026, when the firm deployed $16.34 million into CRCL in a single session as the stock fell by 20%.

The firm also added $5.5 million in CRCL following Circle’s Q1 2026 earnings report. Across 2025 and 2026, Ark has distributed its CRCL position across multiple ETFs, including ARKK, ARKW, and ARKF.

At one point, CRCL ranked as the third-largest holding in ARKK. That is a meaningful signal for a stock that only went public in June 2025.

The current price of $61.95 puts the stock nowhere near its peak. Shortly after its IPO, CRCL briefly traded above $260 intraday.

Circle’s IPO and what came before

Circle’s path to the public markets was not exactly smooth. The company attempted a SPAC merger the year before its IPO and that deal did not close. When Circle finally listed in June 2025 at $31 per share, the market responded with something close to euphoria.

Circle is the issuer of USDC, the second-largest stablecoin by market cap. USDC’s circulating supply reached $44 billion.

The company reported $1.7 billion in revenue for 2024, a 15% increase year-over-year. Circle generates revenue primarily from the yield on reserves backing USDC.

What this means for investors watching CRCL

The risk is real. Circle’s revenue model is meaningfully tied to interest rates. The yield on the reserves backing USDC is where most of the money comes from. If the rate environment shifts materially, the revenue picture changes with it.

There is also the regulatory dimension. Stablecoin legislation has been moving through Washington with more momentum than most crypto-adjacent policy in recent years. The outcome of that process could either validate Circle’s business model or complicate it significantly, depending on what the final rules look like.

CRCL’s current trading level, down sharply from its post-IPO highs and sitting near multi-month lows, puts investors in a familiar position. Analysts who track the stock have been projecting price targets above current levels.

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