CRCL

Circle Price

Closed
CRCL
$113.12
-$1.76(-1.53%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-25 05:25 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-25 05:25, Circle (CRCL) is priced at $113.12, with a total market cap of $30.23B, a P/E ratio of -276.43, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $112.25 and $118.83. The current price is 0.77% above the day's low and 4.80% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 8.90M. Over the past 52 weeks, CRCL has traded between $49.90 to $298.99, and the current price is -62.16% away from the 52-week high.

CRCL Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$114.88
Market Cap$30.23B
Volume8.90M
P/E Ratio-276.43
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Diluted EPS (TTM)0.33
Net Income (FY)-$69.50M
Revenue (FY)$2.74B
Earnings Date2026-08-11
EPS Estimate0.29
Revenue Estimate$732.18M
Shares Outstanding263.19M
Beta (1Y)-1.1845795

About CRCL

Circle Internet Group, Inc. operates as a platform, network, and market infrastructure for stablecoin and blockchain applications. The company provides a suite of stablecoins and related products that include a network utility and application platform for organizations to benefit from stablecoins and the internet financial system; and issues a U.S. dollar-denominated stablecoin. Its stablecoins network comprises circle stablecoins, tokenized funds, liquidity, payments, and developer services, as well as integration services. The company was founded in 2013 and is based in New York, New York.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryFinancial - Capital Markets
CEOJeremy D. Allaire
HeadquartersNew York,NY,US
Official Websitehttps://www.circle.com
Employees (FY)1.10K
Average Revenue (1Y)$2.49M
Net Income per Employee-$63.18K

Learn More about Circle (CRCL)

Circle (CRCL) FAQ

What's the stock price of Circle (CRCL) today?

x
Circle (CRCL) is currently trading at $113.12, with a 24h change of -1.53%. The 52-week trading range is $49.90–$298.99.

What are the 52-week high and low prices for Circle (CRCL)?

x

What is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of Circle (CRCL)? What does it indicate?

x

What is the market cap of Circle (CRCL)?

x

What is the most recent quarterly earnings per share (EPS) for Circle (CRCL)?

x

Should you buy or sell Circle (CRCL) now?

x

What factors can affect the stock price of Circle (CRCL)?

x

How to buy Circle (CRCL) stock?

x

Risk Warning

The stock market involves a high level of risk and price volatility. The value of your investment may increase or decrease, and you may not recover the full amount invested. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should carefully assess your investment experience, financial situation, investment objectives, and risk tolerance, and conduct your own research. Where appropriate, consult an independent financial adviser.

Disclaimer

The content on this page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, or trading recommendations. Gate shall not be held liable for any loss or damage resulting from such financial decisions. Further, take note that Gate may not be able to provide full service in certain markets and jurisdictions, including but not limited to the United States of America, Canada, Iran, and Cuba. For more information on Restricted Locations, please refer to the User Agreement.

Circle (CRCL) Latest News

2026-05-20 10:31Five Crypto Stocks Rise in Pre-Market Trading: CRCL Up 2%, COIN Up 1.55%According to Odaily, five crypto-related stocks gained in pre-market trading on May 20. CRCL rose 2%, COIN gained 1.55%, MSTR advanced 2.28%, SBET rose 0.96%, and HOOD gained 1.33%, according to data from msx.com.2026-05-20 03:53Trader Closes 11,080 CRCL Short Positions in 24 Hours, Incurs $683K LossAccording to HyperInsight, a trader (0xd21d9) closed 11,080 Circle (CRCL) short positions over the past 24 hours, incurring a loss of $683,000. The move follows investor Duan Yongping's disclosure on May 19 that he established a long position of 200,000 Circle shares at an average price of $95.41.2026-05-19 10:31Crypto Stocks Fall in Pre-Market Trading: CRCL Down 1.43%, COIN Down 0.49% on May 19According to Odaily, pre-market crypto stocks declined on May 19. CRCL fell 1.43%, COIN dropped 0.49%, MSTR declined 0.55%, SBET fell 0.63%, and HOOD slipped 0.75%, based on data from msx.com.2026-05-18 09:30Crypto Stocks Decline in Pre-Market Trading on May 18, MSTR Down 3.56%According to Odaily, crypto-linked stocks fell in pre-market trading on May 18, with MSTR declining 3.56%, CRCL down 2.68%, COIN down 2.20%, SBET down 3.87%, and HOOD down 1.46%.2026-05-16 10:06BlackRock Increases MSTR Holdings by 3.14M Shares to $2.216B in Q1, Cuts COIN and CRCLAccording to its Q1 2026 13F filing, BlackRock increased holdings in MSTR by approximately 3.14 million shares to 17.75 million shares, valued at $2.216 billion, and added approximately 2.02 million shares of BMNR to reach 11.08 million shares worth $219 million. The investment firm reduced its position in COIN by roughly 330,000 shares to 16.74 million shares valued at $2.924 billion, and decreased CRCL holdings by about 610,000 shares to 5.06 million shares worth $483 million.

Hot Posts About Circle (CRCL)

Tangxi66

Tangxi66

11 hours ago
What does Duan Yongping's purchase of CRCL indicate? Many people excitedly tell me, saying Xiao Zhan, Duan Yongping also bought CRCL, we bought before Duan Yongping—what's the point of that? Nvidia, Tesla, Google, Pop Mart, CRCL, which ones did you not buy before him? Didn't he buy them later? But his buying doesn't prove anything; buying doesn't mean the stock is good, not buying doesn't mean it's bad—he didn't buy Bitcoin, so you still don't understand, but that doesn't mean Bitcoin is bad. Because he also doesn't buy gold or houses, which only shows he prefers not to invest in "non-business" assets that don't generate cash flow. So why did he buy CRCL? People in the crypto circle think he entered the crypto world, which is a very strange idea. Because classifying CRCL as a "crypto circle stock" is inaccurate; it should be called "a bridge connecting the crypto world and the traditional economy," not just on the crypto side. Didn't I mention before? Suppose in the future, trade between the crypto world and the traditional economy becomes very frequent, then Circle and Tether might be the only two bridges, and everyone passing through them would have to pay fees. So Duan Yongping is investing in a digital era business that could become as essential as utilities, not just in one coin or another. But CRCL doesn't seem to meet Duan Yongping's stock selection standards either. Free cash flow, cash reserves, and the high channel fees needed to maintain market share—none of these seem to satisfy his original criteria. Yes, but so what? Warren Buffett might not buy CRCL, but Duan Yongping might—he applies Buffett's philosophy, but in stock screening, his principles aren't as strictly controlled as Buffett's. As long as he thinks it's a good business, he will relax those principles. Just look at the stocks he buys and the entry prices; many are things Buffett wouldn't touch. Moreover, he only allocates 0.1% of his portfolio to it. How much did you buy? Are you seriously treating it as an important asset to allocate or even gamble on? Duan Yongping is just testing the waters; it's not the same concept at all. Actually, I saw this information before, but didn't write about it because it doesn't affect CRCL's development at all. If you buy stocks just to see who else bought and to confirm yourself—like, "since this person bought it, my previous decision was right"—then just stop buying stocks. When you buy it, it's because you independently believe it's worth investing in; it has nothing to do with "who agrees with you." You shouldn't be happy just because Duan Yongping holds a position; the money you are destined to lose will still be lost. Buying it because Duan Yongping did isn't going to prevent the price from falling. At most, it gives some psychological comfort, like "Duan Yongping also made a mistake," which is normal—so are you investing for emotion or for profit? If you've lost profits, what use is emotion? A company's long-term market value will ultimately return to its intrinsic value. No one would pay 100 yuan for something worth 10 yuan; at least it must have high expectations that "it could be worth 1,000 or 2,000 yuan in the future," so people are willing to buy something now that looks only worth 10 yuan for 100 yuan. But if those expectations never materialize, it's just an empty promise—promises have a shelf life and will spoil. The company's long-term market value will return to where it should be; even if Buffett's grandfather or Musk's grandmother hold the stock, if it should be worth 10 yuan, it will eventually revert to 10 yuan. In the long run, it only depends on how much value the company can create for society, unrelated to who is on that boat.
1
0
0
0