Solana has received another major injection of stablecoin liquidity after Circle reportedly minted an additional $1 billion in USDC on the network around July 1. The move adds to a year that has already seen unusually large gross USDC issuance on Solana, a chain where stablecoins have become central to swaps, leverage, payments, and on-chain trading activity.

TL;DR

Circle reportedly minted another $1 billion in USDC on Solana.
The mint follows another $1 billion Solana USDC issuance in mid-June.
Gross 2026 USDC issuance on Solana is now reported at $64.25 billion.
That figure is gross issuance, not current circulating supply.

The distinction between issuance and supply is important here. A large mint does not mean all of that USDC remains circulating on Solana forever. Tokens can be burned, redeemed, bridged, or otherwise moved as market demand changes. The $64.25 billion figure refers to cumulative gross issuance during 2026, not the live amount of USDC currently sitting on Solana.

Why Solana wants deep stablecoin liquidity

Stablecoins are the base layer for a lot of crypto trading behaviour. On Solana, they are especially important because the network is built around fast, low-cost settlement. Traders use USDC as collateral, as a settlement asset, and as a quick way to move between volatile positions without leaving the chain.

When more USDC is minted onto Solana, it usually points to demand for on-chain dollar liquidity. That demand can come from market makers, DeFi protocols, retail traders, or institutions routing activity through Solana-based venues. It does not automatically mean prices will rise, but it does show that the network remains a live venue for capital movement.

Gross issuance is not the same as circulating supply

This is the part worth spelling out because the headline number can be easy to misread. Gross issuance counts how much USDC has been minted onto Solana across a period. Circulating supply reflects what remains after redemptions, burns, and transfers are accounted for.

So the $64.25 billion figure should not be treated as a claim that Solana currently has that exact amount of USDC active on-chain. Instead, it is a signal of throughput. It shows how much dollar liquidity has been created through the network during the year, even if some of that liquidity later moved elsewhere or was redeemed.

A stronger foundation for Solana DeFi

For Solana’s DeFi ecosystem, this matters because stablecoin depth affects trading quality. More available USDC can improve routing, reduce friction, support lending markets, and make it easier for larger participants to enter and exit positions. In a market where liquidity often moves quickly between chains, stablecoin depth is one of the clearer signs of where users are actually active.

The latest mint also arrives at a time when Solana remains closely tied to high-velocity trading, meme coin activity, and decentralized exchange volume. That can make liquidity demand volatile. But it also keeps Solana near the center of the market’s most active trading lanes. For now, the fresh USDC mint reinforces the view that Solana is still attracting serious on-chain dollar flow.

This report is based on information from Solscan.

This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.

Source: Solscan

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