Circle, the company behind the USDC stablecoin, has activated a public testnet for its Arc blockchain, bringing more than one hundred financial institutions, asset managers, fintech providers, and technology companies into a structured evaluation phase. Participants include major names from traditional finance, such as Visa, HSBC, State Street, Deutsche Bank, BlackRock, and Société Générale, alongside digital asset-native firms such as Coinbase and Kraken.
The trial environment is being used to test how Arc can support tokenized investment funds, foreign exchange settlement, and high-velocity cross-border payments. Visa is using the testnet to study whether a payments stack secured by stablecoins can improve global settlement efficiency. BlackRock executives have signaled that they are examining whether stablecoin-based atomic settlement on Arc could translate into material improvements for capital markets infrastructure. Asset managers, including Invesco, are assessing Arc’s potential to streamline fund operations and optimize international capital flows.
Broad Institutional Validation of Tokenized Settlement Rails
Circle is positioning Arc as a blockchain layer designed to operate as a neutral financial infrastructure spanning both traditional finance and on-chain ecosystems. Its stated direction is to evolve the network into a decentralized system with open validator participation and a public governance regime once the test phase stabilizes.
The roster of firms participating cuts across categories. Technology providers such as AWS and Mastercard are exploring performance and integration hooks. Banking conglomerates like HSBC and Deutsche Bank are testing applications tied to payments and corporate settlement flows. Fintech platforms such as Nuvei and Brex are probing whether Arc can support merchant payouts and cross-border business payments with higher predictability.
Arc Public Testnet is now live.
Open to developers and enterprises globally, Arc is the Economic OS for the internet that unites programmable money and onchain innovation with real-world economic activity.
Start building: https://t.co/RMjxJmjcsH
Learn more:… pic.twitter.com/OtGfrCIVdY— Arc (@arc) October 28, 2025
On the blockchain-native side, DeFi protocols including Aave and Curve are testing composability and liquidity routing on Arc for on-chain financial applications. Regional stablecoin issuers from markets such as Australia and Brazil are evaluating whether the network can support direct cross-border swaps without touching legacy rails. The range of use cases under test underscores that Arc is being examined not as a single-purpose chain but as a generalized infrastructure for financial messaging and value transfer.
Path to Community Governance and Interoperable Capital Markets
Circle has articulated a multi-stage roadmap in which it will steward Arc through launch and early commercialization before handing control to a decentralized governance model. Validator participation is expected to open as the network transitions from private management to community operation, with governance frameworks determining how protocol upgrades and risk rules will be managed.
The move to involve banks, asset managers, payment networks, and DeFi platforms at the testnet stage signals an attempt to align incentives across the segments most likely to adopt blockchain for production-grade settlement. By placing Arc at the intersection of tokenization, payments, and capital market operations, Circle is attempting to position its infrastructure as a default rail for programmable financial flows across jurisdictions and asset classes.
With major incumbents now stress-testing real workloads, the Arc testnet marks a visible attempt to bring blockchain-based settlement out of laboratory contexts and into the tooling perimeter of mainstream financial institutions.








