Circle deepens Japan push as USDC becomes first global dollar stablecoin approved by regulators

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Circle is making an aggressive push into Japan’s corporate finance landscape, with ambitions to bring instant foreign currency settlement capabilities to one of the world’s largest economies.

At the center of that strategy: USDC, Circle’s dollar-pegged stablecoin, which became the first global dollar stablecoin to receive approval under Japan’s Financial Services Agency framework.

The SBI Holdings partnership driving Circle’s Japan expansion

Circle’s Japan entry has been anchored by its partnership with SBI Holdings, one of the country’s most influential financial conglomerates. That collaboration kicked off in 2023 and has since produced tangible results.

The most significant: the establishment of Circle Japan KK, a dedicated local entity designed to serve as the operational hub for Circle’s activities in the Japanese market.

On the product side, SBI VC Trade, SBI’s crypto exchange arm, received regulatory approval on March 4, 2025, to list USDC. The stablecoin’s official launch on the platform was set for March 26, 2025.

The approval matters because Japan’s stablecoin rules require issuers to meet strict reserve and compliance standards. Circle clearing that bar with USDC positions the token as a credible instrument for Japanese institutions, not just retail crypto traders.

Why corporate FX settlement is the real prize

Japan is the world’s third-largest economy by GDP, and its corporations move enormous volumes of foreign currency every single day.

Traditional FX settlement between Japanese firms and their international counterparts typically involves correspondent banking networks, multiple intermediaries, and settlement windows that can stretch across days.

Stablecoins like USDC offer a fundamentally different model. Settlement can happen in minutes rather than days. Transaction costs drop significantly. And the entire process runs on blockchain rails that provide real-time transparency.

Circle has been positioning USDC as precisely this kind of corporate infrastructure tool, targeting institutional adoption for digital payments, liquidity management, and treasury operations.

What this means for investors and the broader market

First, regulatory precedent. Japan approving USDC under its FSA framework creates a template that other Asian regulators might follow.

Second, competitive dynamics. The Japanese crypto market has historically been somewhat insular, with domestic players like bitFlyer and Coincheck dominating. Circle entering through a partnership with SBI, rather than trying to go it alone, reflects a pragmatic understanding of how business gets done in Japan.

Third, the liquidity implications. If USDC gains meaningful traction among Japanese corporations for settlement purposes, it could significantly boost the token’s overall circulation and utility.

Japan’s regulatory environment overhauled its crypto regulations after the Mt. Gox collapse and again after the Coincheck hack. Any compliance stumble by Circle or its partners could trigger regulatory tightening that slows adoption.

The key metric to watch is actual USDC transaction volume on Japanese platforms in the months following the March 26, 2025 launch.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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