Circle and BNY expanded their institutional stablecoin partnership, making USDC the first stablecoin supported on BNY’s Digital Asset Custody platform. The new functionality lets BNY clients
Circle and BNY expanded their institutional stablecoin partnership, making USDC the first stablecoin supported on BNY’s Digital Asset Custody platform.
The new functionality lets BNY clients store and transfer USDC inside BNY digital asset custody wallets. Clients can also instruct Circle through BNY to mint USDC from U.S. dollars and burn USDC back into U.S. dollars, giving institutions a direct fiat-to-stablecoin workflow inside a regulated custody and cash-management environment.
The move strengthens BNY’s role in USDC infrastructure. The bank already serves as the primary custodian for a large portion of USDC reserves, while the expanded setup connects reserve custody, digital asset custody and stablecoin conversion inside one institutional framework.
BNY oversees $59.3 trillion in assets under custody and/or administration and $2.2 trillion in assets under management. Adding USDC to that platform gives Circle a deeper route into banks, asset managers, pension-linked institutions and other large financial clients that already operate through BNY systems.
Stablecoin Custody Moves Into Bank Infrastructure
The launch shifts USDC further away from exchange-only stablecoin usage and deeper into traditional finance operations. Institutions can now treat USDC custody, transfer, minting and redemption as part of a bank-connected workflow rather than a separate crypto-native process.
That structure matters for stablecoin adoption because large institutions need custody controls, audit trails, compliance workflows, cash movement and redemption access before using tokenized dollars at scale. BNY’s Digital Assets platform already supports institutional digital asset custody and is built around regulated bank infrastructure, asset segregation and operational resilience.
The move also lands as payment companies and financial institutions are hiring and building around stablecoin rails. American Express recently opened a stablecoin strategy role tied to tokenized settlement and blockchain partnerships, showing how traditional payment networks are moving stablecoins from research into product planning.
For Circle, BNY adds another institutional route for USDC at a time when stablecoins are becoming settlement assets, collateral tools and liquidity instruments across public chains, private platforms and regulated market infrastructure.
USDC Push Fits Wider Dollar Settlement Shift
USDC is the second-largest stablecoin, with live market trackers placing its supply near $73 billion to $74 billion. The broader stablecoin market remains above $312 billion, with dollar-backed tokens still dominating issuance, trading liquidity and payment use cases.
That scale has made stablecoins a larger policy issue. Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller recently linked stablecoins to Treasury demand, placing dollar tokens inside the debate over global dollar access, reserve assets and private-sector payment rails.
BNY’s platform expansion also follows the same direction as other institutional settlement moves. Mastercard’s always-on stablecoin settlement push showed how large financial networks are treating tokenized dollars as infrastructure for 24/7 money movement, not only crypto trading balances.
BNY plans to expand support over time to additional stablecoin issuers and digital cash workflows. For now, USDC is the first stablecoin supported on BNY’s Digital Asset Custody platform, with institutional clients able to store, transfer, mint and burn USDC through the expanded Circle-BNY setup.
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