Circle minted another roughly $750 million worth of USDC on Solana on July 13, pushing its cumulative issuance on the network this year to around $68.26 billion, according to blockchain tracker Onchain Lens. The action emphasizes Solana’s position as one of the major crypto platforms for dollar liquidity as the market participants continue to observe USDC minting as an early sign of capital movements.
USDC is a significant asset in the digital economy. It is commonly used to settle trades, provide collateral for lending and derivatives usage, and execute transactions relating to real-world assets in their tokenized form. As a result, any new issuance causes a bigger interest spread than just within Solana. New issuance does not mean an automatic increase in value, but it does indicate growing demand for on-chain dollars if it is sustained by similar trading activity.
The latest batch of tokens was minted to the Solana address: 7VHUFJHWu2CuExkJcJrzhQPJ2oygupTWkL2A2For4BmE, according to Onchain Lens. The latest issuance continues a trend that has been building throughout 2026. In April, Cryptopolitan reported that Circle minted $3.25 billion of USDC on Solana within a single week through thirteen separate tranches of 250 million tokens.
Understanding the figure of $68.26 billion is vital. It represents the total value of USDC issued on the Solana blockchain this year and does not correspond to the amount that is circulating today. Tokens may be exchanged for U.S. dollars later down the line, destroyed, or moved to another blockchain in the future, depending on how the market evolves.
The present supply illustrates a completely different picture. According to DefiLlama, the amount of USDC currently present on Solana is around $7.3 billion, while the entire amount of USDC held across all the blockchains is close to $73.5 billion.
Comparison of the above numbers clarifies how liquidity flows through the network. Only 10.7% of USDC created on Solana this year is still on the chain. In other words, the total number of minted USDC is approximately 9.35 times larger than the current circulating USDC amount.
This doesn’t mean that around 90% of the tokens are lost. Instead, it shows that liquidity is being recycled actively. A lot of capital is most probably sold, burned, or transferred to other networks due to liquidity moving through the ecosystems. More than just accumulating stablecoins, Solana is showing that it is actually functioning as an efficient settlement network where large amounts of dollars are flowing.
Circle has pointed out many times that it is very important to consider the issuance in line with the redemptions.
USDC is a digital dollar backed 100% by highly liquid cash and cash-equivalent assets and is always redeemable 1:1 for US dollars.
— Circle
The transparency reports of the firm keep a separate record of new issuance, redemption, and circulating supply, indicating that new mints aren’t everything we need to consider in the context of supply.
One of the reasons why Circle continues to issue heavily on Solana is that it remains one of the hottest trading venues in the crypto space. Earlier this year, Cryptopolitan reported that USDC has made up 52% of all stablecoins stored on Solana, amounting to $14.7 billion; while decentralized exchanges such as Raydium, Jupiter, and Orca continue doing considerable trading. A large reserve of stablecoins typically improves liquidity by decreasing spreads and facilitating large trades, which are executed with less impact on prices.
The rise in issuance correlates with the wider expansion of Circle’s activities in institutional finance. In June, Circle announced that BNY would be the first partner to offer institutional custody services and direct USDC minting and redemption. Circle has also collaborated with Standard Chartered to offer network access to institutional investors, reflecting its goal of developing closer ties between traditional finance and blockchain transactions.
According to Circle’s transparency statements, USDC can still be redeemed on a one-for-one basis for US dollars and is backed by a reserve consisting primarily of cash and short-term US Treasury securities. It is, in terms of market cap, still the world’s second-largest stablecoin after Tether’s USDT.
In the future, it is expected that investors will monitor how long it takes for newly issued USDC to either remain on Solana or to move to other locations through redemption and cross-chain transfers. If the trend holds true, Solana’s significance may relate less to how much USDC it possesses at any given time, but rather to the overall amount of dollar liquidity that flows through the platform.
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