Circle has launched cirBTC on Ethereum, giving the stablecoin issuer a direct entry into the wrapped Bitcoin market and setting up a new challenge to existing BTC-backed DeFi assets.
TL;DR
- cirBTC is live on Ethereum and backed 1:1 by Bitcoin.
- Circle says the asset uses segregated custody and Chainlink Proof of Reserve.
- The product is issued through Circle’s Bermuda-regulated structure.
Circle Enters Wrapped Bitcoin
Wrapped Bitcoin products have become a key part of DeFi because they let BTC liquidity move into Ethereum-based lending, trading and collateral markets. Circle’s cirBTC launch adds a new institutional name to that market, which has already been shaped by assets such as WBTC and cbBTC.
The verified source packet says cirBTC is live on Ethereum and backed 1:1 by Bitcoin held in segregated custody. Circle is also using Chainlink Proof of Reserve, giving the market a way to monitor reserve backing rather than relying only on issuer statements.
Why Custody And Transparency Matter
The wrapped Bitcoin market has always depended on trust. BTC must be custodied somewhere while a tokenized representation trades on another chain. That creates questions around reserves, issuer controls, redemption rights and transparency. Circle is trying to differentiate cirBTC by emphasizing segregated custody and reserve visibility.
That pitch makes sense for institutional DeFi. Larger funds and protocols need collateral assets that can pass operational and risk reviews. A wrapped BTC asset from Circle, with reserve transparency and a regulated issuance structure, could appeal to platforms that want Bitcoin liquidity but are sensitive to custody risk.
Bermuda Structure Is Important
The source packet notes that cirBTC is issued through Circle’s Bermuda-regulated subsidiary. That detail should be included because it clarifies the legal structure behind the asset. Circle is a US firm, but the product’s issuance framework is not simply a domestic US product.
That matters for users, protocols and compliance teams assessing where the asset sits legally. It also shows how major crypto companies continue to use international regulatory structures when launching products that may not fit neatly into US frameworks.
A New Competitive Front
The immediate question is whether cirBTC can attract meaningful liquidity. Wrapped Bitcoin assets depend on integrations: lending markets, DEX pools, vaults, collateral frameworks and institutional custody relationships. Without those, even a well-structured asset can remain niche.
Still, Circle’s entry is meaningful. The company already has deep stablecoin infrastructure, institutional relationships and a regulatory-first brand. If it can bring those strengths to Bitcoin collateral, cirBTC could become more than another wrapper. It could become a building block for a more institutionally acceptable version of Bitcoin DeFi.
This report is based on information from Circle blogÂ
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.