Circle Internet Group (NYSE:CRCL) stock fell 7.8% to $112.28 after reports on May 7 showed a long-time board member sold 11,666 shares just four days before the company’s scheduled first-quarter earnings release.
The sale by Michelle Burns, a board member since 2013, was disclosed in regulatory filings. The timing has drawn scrutiny as investors weigh bearish signals against the company's growth narrative ahead of its May 11 report.
The drop extends recent volatility for the stock, which is now trading below the key $120 level. The sale comes amid rising skepticism from some market participants. Short interest has increased by 22.4% in the last two reporting periods and now accounts for 12.2% of the equity's available float, according to data from Schaeffer's Investment Research. In addition, 12 of the 24 analysts covering the stock rate it as "hold" or worse.
The insider sale sharpens the focus on Circle’s May 11 earnings, where investors will look for validation of the company's high valuation. Bulls expect strong USDC circulation figures, which drive the majority of revenue, to overcome concerns about the stock's near-term pressure and a lofty 99.8x forward P/E ratio.
Bulls Bet on Volume, Bears Cite Valuation
Despite the stock's decline, Circle's underlying business metrics show strength. Its USDC stablecoin, a crypto asset pegged to the U.S. dollar, recorded $2.2 trillion in adjusted transaction volume year-to-date in 2026, capturing roughly 64% of the market compared to rival Tether's USDT, according to Mizuho analysis. This follows a fourth quarter where USDC supply grew 72% year-over-year to $75.3 billion.
The company also received a significant boost from Washington, after a bipartisan compromise on the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act preserved the ability for platforms to offer activity-based rewards on stablecoins. Bulls argue this regulatory clarity, combined with USDC's dominance in real economic usage, provides a long-term tailwind that justifies the company's heavy investment in its Arc blockchain and other platform services.
The bear case centers on valuation. With normalized EPS projected to fall 49% in 2026 due to peak investment spending, the stock's 99.8x NTM P/E multiple demands flawless execution. The average Wall Street analyst price target of $129.75 suggests limited near-term upside from the current price, standing in stark contrast to valuation models that see a path to over $500 based on long-term platform adoption. The upcoming earnings report is a critical test; a USDC circulation figure above $80 billion would support the bull case, while a drop below $75 billion would give bears more ammunition.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.