Today: 10 April 2026
USDC-USD Price Today (Dec. 17, 2025): USD Coin Holds the $1 Peg as Visa Expands USDC Settlement — Forecast and What Comes Next
17 December 2025
6 mins read

USDC-USD Price Today (Dec. 17, 2025): USD Coin Holds the $1 Peg as Visa Expands USDC Settlement — Forecast and What Comes Next

USD Coin (USDC-USD) is doing what it was built to do on December 17, 2025: trade extremely close to $1.00.

At the time of writing, CoinGecko shows USDC at about $0.9999 with a tight 24-hour range roughly between ~$0.9987 and ~$1.00—a small band that reflects normal liquidity and exchange-to-exchange differences, not “volatility” in the way traders think about Bitcoin or Ethereum. CoinGecko

Meanwhile, CoinMarketCap also keeps USDC essentially at par, listing the token around $0.9997 and placing 24-hour trading volume in the low tens of billions (a reminder that stablecoins are used heavily as “cash legs” across exchanges and settlement flows). CoinMarketCap

So why is USDC suddenly in the headlines if the price hasn’t moved? Because the story on Dec. 17 isn’t the price—it’s the plumbing: payments giants and regulators are moving stablecoins closer to the center of the U.S. financial system.

Below is a news-driven, fundamentals-first look at USDC price today, the USDC-USD forecast, and the key developments shaping sentiment on December 17, 2025.


USDC price today: where USD Coin is trading on Dec. 17, 2025

Across major crypto price trackers, USDC is hovering at (or just under) $1.00:

  • USDC-USD price: about $0.9999
  • 24-hour range: roughly $0.9987 to $1.00
  • Market cap / supply scale: roughly $78B market cap and ~78B circulating supply on large trackers

It’s normal for USDC to print slightly below (or above) $1.00 by a few ten-thousandths of a dollar, depending on:

  • exchange fees and spreads,
  • short-term demand for on-exchange “cash,”
  • redemption and issuance flows,
  • and momentary liquidity imbalances during market stress.

That’s also why two reputable trackers can show slightly different last prices at the same moment—USDC is trading across many venues.


Why USDC usually stays near $1 (and why it still can drift)

USDC is a fiat-backed stablecoin designed for payments, trading, and settlement—not for price appreciation. Many “price prediction” articles about USDC ultimately converge on the obvious base case: USDC remains near $1 because that is its purpose and market structure. Nasdaq

That said, USDC is not a magic token. A stablecoin can temporarily drift from peg if:

  • redemptions spike faster than liquidity can move,
  • counterparties get cautious,
  • regulatory headlines change risk perceptions,
  • or market infrastructure breaks (exchanges, rails, or bridges).

The market’s job is to constantly test the peg; the issuer’s job is to keep redemption confidence high.


The biggest USDC news driving attention on Dec. 17: Visa expands USDC settlement in the U.S.

The dominant headline behind today’s spike in attention is Visa’s U.S. expansion of stablecoin settlement using Circle’s USDC.

What Visa announced

In a December 16, 2025 press release (still the key driver of today’s coverage and analysis), Visa said it is launching USDC settlement in the United States, letting U.S. issuer and acquirer partners settle with Visa in Circle’s USDC, which Visa describes as “fully reserved” and “dollar-denominated.” Visa Investor Relations

Visa also emphasized the operational angle:

  • seven-day settlement availability
  • faster funds movement over blockchains
  • no change to the consumer card experience

Who’s involved and what chain is being used

Visa named Cross River Bank and Lead Bank as initial participants, and said they have started settling with Visa in USDC over the Solana blockchain, with broader U.S. availability planned through 2026.

Why this matters for USDC (even if the price doesn’t move)

This doesn’t “pump” USDC the way a crypto rally pumps a volatile token—but it can:

  • increase transactional demand for USDC as a settlement asset,
  • deepen USDC’s integration into treasury workflows,
  • and potentially expand the number of institutions that treat USDC as a legitimate settlement instrument.

Visa also pointed to scale: it said monthly stablecoin settlement volume passed a $3.5B annualized run rate as of Nov. 30.

Arc: Visa points to Circle’s new chain plans

Another detail that grabbed attention in industry commentary: Visa said it is a design partner for Arc, described as a new Layer-1 blockchain developed by Circle (in public testnet), and that Visa plans to utilize Arc for USDC settlement and operate a validator node once it goes live.

Separately, Nasdaq’s coverage framed the move as part of Visa positioning itself as a bridge between traditional rails and onchain infrastructure, including an advisory practice to guide institutions on stablecoin implementation.


The other major “today” headline: FDIC moves to implement the GENIUS Act stablecoin framework

In parallel with Visa’s announcement, U.S. regulators are also advancing rules around stablecoin issuance—another reason stablecoins are dominating today’s news cycle.

FDIC proposal: how banks can apply to issue payment stablecoins

The FDIC announced it approved a notice of proposed rulemaking that would implement the application provisions under the GENIUS Act, establishing how FDIC-supervised institutions would apply to issue payment stablecoins through a subsidiary.

In the FDIC’s December 16 board-meeting statement, the agency described this as its first action to implement the GENIUS Act and signaled more rulemaking work ahead (capital, liquidity, and risk-management requirements).

Why the FDIC news matters to USDC holders

This is not “about USDC” directly—but it changes the environment USDC operates in:

  • More clarity can raise institutional comfort with stablecoins as a category.
  • More competition is possible if insured banks issue their own regulated payment stablecoins.
  • Compliance expectations around reserves, governance, and supervision can shape what stablecoins survive and scale.

A Dec. 17 industry roundup summarized the moment bluntly: stablecoins are moving deeper into the U.S. financial system, citing Visa’s expansion and the FDIC’s proposal.


GENIUS Act: the legal foundation behind today’s regulatory momentum

Multiple credible sources anchor today’s regulatory storyline to the GENIUS Act:

  • The White House published a fact sheet saying President Donald J. Trump signed the GENIUS Act into law on July 18, 2025.
  • Congress.gov lists the bill as S.1582 — GENIUS Act (119th Congress).
  • The FDIC’s statement also references the statute as the framework for U.S. payment stablecoin issuance.

For USDC watchers, the key takeaway is that the U.S. is moving from “guidance and enforcement” toward a more explicit statutory + rulemaking regime for stablecoins.


Circle, reserves, and transparency: what “peg confidence” is built on

Because USDC is designed to stay around $1.00, the real fundamentals question is not “Where is the price going?” but:

Will the market continue to believe USDC can be redeemed reliably at $1?

Circle’s positioning centers on disclosures and attestations:

  • Circle says USDC reserve holdings are disclosed on a weekly basis, and that a Big Four accounting firm provides monthly third-party assurance, prepared according to AICPA attestation standards.
  • Circle’s USDC page also highlights the scale of circulation (around $78.3B USDC in circulation as of Dec. 15, 2025).

And from a key U.S. regulatory filing, Circle described its reserve posture (as of March 31, 2025) as largely held in a government money market fund managed by BlackRock (Circle Reserve Fund), with assets held in custody at BNY—while also noting money market fund shares are not FDIC-insured.

That last point is important: USDC is not the same thing as a bank deposit, even if it is designed to be stable.


Global context: not every regulator sees stablecoins as a net positive

While U.S. policy is moving toward formal frameworks, other jurisdictions remain skeptical.

For example, Reuters reported that India’s central bank deputy governor warned stablecoins can pose macro and systemic risks and argued they offer no benefits beyond fiat money, while also highlighting concerns around illicit payments and monetary stability.

This matters for USDC because stablecoins are global instruments—policy fragmentation can affect access, distribution, and growth even if the USD peg itself holds.


USDC-USD forecast: what to expect next (and what could break the pattern)

Base case forecast: USDC stays near $1.00

USDC’s most likely forecast is the simplest:

  • USDC remains very close to $1.00 in the near term and over longer horizons, with small deviations reflecting market microstructure.

Visa expanding settlement options doesn’t change the peg mechanism—it potentially changes USDC usage. The “price forecast,” in other words, is still a peg forecast.

Near-term trading expectation: tight band around $1

Given today’s observed behavior, a reasonable expectation is that USDC continues to trade in a very tight range—fractions of a cent—unless a specific stress catalyst emerges (exchange disruption, major redemption shock, sudden regulatory action, or issuer-specific news).

Medium-term (2026) outlook: adoption up, price flat

The more interesting forecast is not price, but adoption and market structure:

  • Visa plans broader U.S. availability through 2026 for USDC settlement.
  • The FDIC is starting the rulemaking process for bank-issued payment stablecoins under the GENIUS Act, with comments and follow-on proposals expected.

That combination points to a plausible 2026 scenario where:

  • stablecoins are used more like settlement instruments,
  • compliance expectations tighten,
  • and USDC competes not only with other nonbank stablecoins, but potentially with bank-issued alternatives.

What could cause USDC to trade meaningfully off-peg?

While day-to-day deviations are tiny, sustained off-peg moves are usually about confidence and liquidity. Watch for:

  1. Redemption/liquidity stress
    • If markets doubt rapid redemption at par, USDC could trade below $1.
  2. Regulatory shocks
    • New rules can be positive (clarity) or disruptive (access restrictions).
  3. Operational or counterparty events
    • Exchange outages, banking rail interruptions, or settlement constraints.
  4. Stablecoin contagion / reputation effects
    • Even unrelated stablecoin failures can cause “flight-to-quality” or broad risk-off moves. By contrast, algorithmic stablecoin collapses remain cautionary examples of how a “peg narrative” can break under stress. Tom’s Hardware

Bottom line

On Dec. 17, 2025, USDC-USD is essentially $1.00, and that’s the point.

The real story behind today’s search surge is structural:

  • Visa is expanding USDC settlement for U.S. partners (with Solana as the initial chain and broader rollout planned through 2026).
  • The FDIC is moving forward on GENIUS Act implementation for bank-issued payment stablecoins.
  • Regulatory integration is accelerating in the U.S., while skepticism remains in other major jurisdictions.

USDC price forecast: still a $1 peg—unless the market is given a reason to doubt redemption confidence.
USDC adoption forecast: the next phase looks less like crypto speculation and more like payments infrastructure.

Stock Market Today

  • Morgan Stanley Raises Price Target for Regeneron Pharmaceuticals STOCK
    April 10, 2026, 12:29 PM EDT. Morgan Stanley increased its price target for Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:REGN) from $769 to $796, indicating a potential 6.36% upside. The biopharmaceutical stock is rated "equal weight" by Morgan Stanley. Other analysts show mixed views: Piper Sandler rates it "overweight" with an $875 target, while Guggenheim and JPMorgan raised their targets to $975 and $950 respectively, maintaining buy ratings. Regeneron's average analyst rating is "Moderate Buy" with a target near $812. The stock dropped 2.5% to $748.42 on Friday, below the 50-day average of $767.27. The company reported strong Q4 earnings with EPS of $11.44, beating estimates, and revenue grew 2.5% year-over-year to $3.88 billion. Market cap stands at $79.12 billion with a P/E ratio of 17.99.

Latest article

UK Stock Market Today: FTSE 100 Climbs as Traders Eye Fragile Iran Ceasefire

UK Stock Market Today: FTSE 100 Climbs as Traders Eye Fragile Iran Ceasefire

10 April 2026
London’s FTSE 100 rose 0.38% to 10,644.28 late Friday morning as investors awaited U.S.-Iran talks in Pakistan. Brent crude climbed 1% to $96.83 a barrel, while sterling eased but was on track for its biggest weekly gain since January. The FTSE 250 gained 0.79%. Britain’s 10-year gilt yield stood at 4.807%.
US Stock Market Today: CPI, Oil and Iran Truce Set the Tone Before the Open

US Stock Market Today: CPI, Oil and Iran Truce Set the Tone Before the Open

10 April 2026
Dow e-minis slipped 0.15% before Friday’s open, with S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures each down 0.08% as traders awaited March CPI data and watched U.S.-Iran tensions. Economists expect headline CPI to rise 0.9% for March and 3.3% year-on-year. Weekly jobless claims increased to 219,000. Brent crude traded near $97 a barrel, while shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remained well below normal.
Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 10.04.2026

10 April 2026
LIVEMarkets rolling coverageStarted: April 10, 2026, 12:00 AM EDTUpdated: April 10, 2026, 12:30 PM EDT Applied Materials Rises to 163rd in S&P 500 Analyst Rankings April 10, 2026, 12:30 PM EDT. Applied Materials (AMAT) climbed one spot to become the 163rd-ranked stock among S&P 500 components based on analyst opinions from major brokerages. The ranking aggregates and averages broker ratings, offering a gauge of market sentiment. Year to date, AMAT's stock price has surged 40.3%, reflecting strong investor interest amid positive analyst outlooks. This movement underscores Applied Materials' growing appeal within the semiconductor sector. Morgan Stanley Raises Price Target for
MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

MARA Holdings Stock Rises Even After Target Cut as Bitcoin Miner Leans Harder Into AI

9 April 2026
MARA Holdings shares rose 1.7% to $9.67 Thursday despite Cantor Fitzgerald cutting its price target to $10. The company recently sold 15,133 bitcoin for $1.1 billion and agreed to repurchase $1 billion in convertible notes at a discount. MARA is expanding into AI and cloud infrastructure, but fourth-quarter revenue fell 6% and it posted a $1.7 billion net loss.
XRP USD Price Today (XRP-USD): XRP Slips Under $2 as Spot XRP ETFs Top $1B Inflows — Price Forecast and 2026 Outlook (Dec. 17, 2025)
Previous Story

XRP USD Price Today (XRP-USD): XRP Slips Under $2 as Spot XRP ETFs Top $1B Inflows — Price Forecast and 2026 Outlook (Dec. 17, 2025)

Tesla Stock After Hours Today (Dec. 17, 2025): TSLA Slides From a Fresh Record—What to Know Before the Market Opens Thursday
Next Story

Tesla Stock After Hours Today (Dec. 17, 2025): TSLA Slides From a Fresh Record—What to Know Before the Market Opens Thursday

Go toTop