HomeWorld NewsFintechARK Invest sells Robinhood to double down on $37M Circle stock bet

ARK Invest sells Robinhood to double down on $37M Circle stock bet

ARK Invest has been buying Circle Internet Group stock with unusual intensity — and on July 9, the firm added another 217,896 shares of Circle (CRCL) worth approximately $13.7 million, even as the stock slid further from its post-IPO highs. At the same time, ARK sold off 85,319 shares of Robinhood Markets (HOOD), generating around $9.8 million in proceeds. The contrast is deliberate: selling into strength, buying into weakness, all in a single session.

Key takeaways

  • ARK Invest bought 217,896 Circle shares for ~$13.7 million on July 9, while selling 85,319 Robinhood shares for ~$9.8 million.
  • ARK has now deployed over $37 million into Circle in roughly eight weeks, including ~$18 million on July 1 and ~$5.5 million in May.
  • Circle’s stock closed at $63.01 on July 9, down 1.65%, and remains well below its post-IPO peak after initially surging nearly 300% from its offering price in 2025.
  • Circle earns most of its income from interest on USDC reserves, making revenue sensitive to falling interest rates and competitive pressure from Tether’s USDT.
  • Of 25 Wall Street analysts covering Circle, 13 have Buy or equivalent ratings, with a consensus 12-month price target of $131.76 — more than double the current price.

A conviction trade building for weeks

This wasn’t an impulse buy. ARK’s July 9 purchase is the third notable accumulation in a short window. On July 1, the firm put roughly $18 million into Circle shares. Before that, in May, another $5.5 million followed Circle’s quarterly earnings disclosure. Add the latest tranche and the total commitment reaches more than $37 million in approximately eight weeks — an aggressive pace even by ARK’s standards.

The firm’s strategy here reads as classic ARK playbook: high conviction, long time horizon, buy on dips. Circle’s stock closing at $63.01 on July 9 — down 1.65% — sits dramatically below where it was trading after its 2025 IPO, when shares briefly surged nearly 300% above their offering price before a significant correction pulled them back. That kind of drawdown, for a growth-oriented fund, looks less like a warning and more like a discount.

The flip side of the same logic drove the Robinhood exit. HOOD closed at $115.11 on July 9, up 1.39% — solid ground to lock in proceeds. Rotating capital from a recent winner into a beaten-down name that the fund believes in longer term is precisely the kind of repositioning ARK telegraphs through its daily trade disclosures.

What Circle actually does — and where the risks sit

Circle is the company behind USDC, one of the most widely used stablecoins in crypto markets. That sounds like a stable, boring business. In some ways it is. But the revenue model carries a specific sensitivity that any investor needs to understand before following ARK into this trade.

Circle primarily earns income from the interest yields on its USDC reserve holdings. When rates are high, reserves generate meaningful revenue. When rates fall, that stream compresses — and Circle has limited ability to offset it quickly. The business model is essentially a rate-sensitive financial operation dressed in crypto infrastructure clothing.

Then there’s the competition. Tether’s USDT continues to dominate global stablecoin market share, and that dominance is not fading. Circle is the more regulated, more transparent alternative — which has its own appeal, especially to institutional users — but it is fighting for ground in a market where the incumbent has deep, structural advantages.

Why ARK’s bet still makes strategic sense

Despite those headwinds, the structural argument for Circle isn’t hard to reconstruct. If stablecoin adoption accelerates — particularly in payments, institutional settlement, or cross-border transactions — USDC’s more compliance-friendly profile could become a genuine competitive asset rather than just a niche differentiator. ARK has consistently argued that regulatory clarity, when it arrives, will disproportionately benefit companies like Circle that have positioned themselves ahead of it.

That regulatory clarity, however, is not yet here.

The CLARITY Act and a stalled legislative clock

Wood has publicly supported the CLARITY Act, a bill designed to resolve one of crypto’s most persistent legal ambiguities: whether digital assets should be classified as commodities or securities. The legislation would also expand the CFTC’s regulatory authority over the space. It’s the kind of framework that would give institutional investors a cleaner path to crypto exposure and provide companies like Circle a more predictable operating environment.

The problem is that the CLARITY Act did not advance in the Senate by the July 4 deadline, and its path forward remains unclear. Without that legislative foundation, the regulatory uncertainty that has long shadowed crypto equities persists — and Circle, as a publicly traded company sitting at the intersection of fintech and stablecoins, absorbs that uncertainty more directly than most.

This is arguably the single biggest variable in ARK’s Circle thesis. The fund is betting not just on the company’s current business, but on a future where the regulatory framework catches up with the technology. Every delay in that process extends the window of uncertainty — and keeps institutional capital on the sidelines.

What Wall Street analysts think

ARK isn’t alone in its optimism, even if the stock’s price action hasn’t reflected it yet. Of the 25 analysts currently covering Circle, 13 have issued Buy or equivalent ratings. The consensus 12-month price target sits at $131.76 — implying potential upside of more than 109% from the $63.01 close on July 9. That’s a wide gap, and it reflects either significant long-term confidence in the business or the market’s current unwillingness to price in that potential.

By contrast, analyst sentiment on Robinhood looks more restrained — a mean price target suggesting around 2.4% downside from its July 9 close. That asymmetry in forward expectations helps explain why ARK made the switch it did. Both stocks serve a broadly pro-crypto, fintech-growth narrative, but the opportunity profile looks very different at current prices.

It’s also worth noting that corporate insiders at both Circle and Robinhood have conducted share sales in recent months — a behavioral signal that runs in the opposite direction of ARK’s ongoing accumulation. Insider selling doesn’t necessarily mean a company is in trouble, but it does add a layer of complexity to the picture that any investor tracking these positions should weigh against the institutional buying narrative.

The real question isn’t whether ARK has conviction in Circle — the $37 million-plus build over eight weeks answers that clearly. The question is whether the catalysts that would justify the Wall Street price target — rate stability, USDC adoption growth, and eventually some form of regulatory clarity — arrive fast enough to reward the bet before the window shifts again.

FAQ

What recent trading activities did ARK Invest conduct involving Circle and Robinhood shares?

On July 9, ARK Invest acquired 217,896 shares of Circle Internet Group for approximately $13.7 million and sold 85,319 Robinhood Markets shares for roughly $9.8 million in the same trading session.

Why is ARK Invest accumulating Circle shares so aggressively?

ARK views Circle’s stock price weakness as a long-term entry opportunity consistent with its conviction-driven investment strategy. The firm has invested over $37 million in Circle in approximately eight weeks, signaling strong confidence in the company’s growth potential despite current price pressure.

What are the main risks to Circle’s business model?

Circle’s income depends primarily on interest earned on USDC reserve holdings, making it vulnerable to declining interest rates. The company also faces strong competition from Tether’s USDT, which currently dominates the global stablecoin market.

What is the regulatory status of the CLARITY Act discussed in relation to Circle?

The CLARITY Act, supported by ARK’s Wood, aims to clarify whether digital assets are commodities or securities and expand CFTC oversight. However, the bill stalled in the US Senate by the July 4 deadline, leaving the regulatory environment for crypto companies like Circle uncertain.

Article produced with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by the editorial team.

Amelia Tomasicchiohttps://cryptonomist.ch
As expert in digital marketing, Amelia began working in the fintech sector in 2014 after writing her thesis on Bitcoin technology. Previously author for several international crypto-related magazines and CMO at Eidoo. She is now the co-founder of The Cryptonomist. She is also a marketing teacher at Digital Coach in Milan and she published a book about NFTs for the Italian publishing house Mondadori, while she is also helping artists and company to entering in the sector. As advisor, Amelia is also involved in metaverse-related project such as The Nemesis and OVER.
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