
Circle's stablecoin-native Layer-1 blockchain Arc published on May 26 on X a blueprint for prediction market infrastructure, confirming four core design directions: stablecoin-native execution, built-in foreign exchange support, deterministic settlement, and an architecture aimed at supporting compliant workflow requirements. Arc mainnet is planned to launch in 2026; meanwhile, the public testnet to date has processed over 150 million transactions.
Arc's technical design specifically targets four major limitations of current prediction market platforms:
Volatile Gas fees: Networks like Ethereum use volatile Gas tokens, requiring users to manage additional assets and making transaction fees difficult to predict, which is especially unfriendly to small-value transactions. Arc's solution: Gas fees are paid directly with USDC, with transaction costs priced in fiat and kept predictable. Developers can model user flows more accurately, making low-barrier prediction markets for consumers more economically viable.
Dollar-centered fund flows: Most prediction markets support only USD pricing, limiting participation from users in other currency communities and constraining cross-border application scenarios. Arc's solution: native on-chain FX routing allows developers to build markets around different stablecoin designs (for example, EURC-settled markets tied to European inflation, and USDC-settled markets related to U.S. policy) without forcing users to convert currencies.
UX fragmentation across jurisdictions: Users in different regions face inconsistent market entry points and experiences, restricting the global accessibility of prediction markets. Arc's solution: support localized market design and multi-currency participation, enabling developers to build region-specific market versions on a single settlement layer.
Insufficient support for compliant workflows: If prediction markets want to enter governance, enterprise, or regulated scenarios, they need transfer controls, identity authentication, and auditability—capabilities that existing public-chain architectures struggle to provide. Arc's solution: transfer controls, identity gates, or information disclosure processes can be directly encoded into application logic. Deterministic finality provides clear settlement outcomes, while auditability supports verification and operational trust.
On Ethereum and its Layer-2s, Gas fees typically need to be paid in ETH or native tokens, which requires users to hold additional native tokens to interact, increasing onboarding friction. Arc is an independent Layer-1 blockchain whose consensus-layer protocol is designed to accept USDC as the Gas token directly, rather than simulating this capability outside the protocol via mechanisms such as Gas Station Network. This means users only need to hold USDC to perform all operations on Arc, without needing to obtain additional native tokens. For developers, Gas costs are priced in fiat and remain stable, making business-model and user-experience design more predictable.
Deterministic finality means that once a block is confirmed, transactions cannot be rolled back or changed. For prediction markets, this is crucial during the settlement phase: when the outcome of a market event is confirmed (e.g., election results or when a price reaches a specific level), the system must immediately and irreversibly allocate funds to the winners. If the underlying blockchain has "probabilistic finality" (such as Bitcoin requiring multiple confirmations before being considered safe), the settlement process carries theoretical risk of reorganization attacks. Arc's deterministic finality, together with approximately 0.5 seconds of testnet settlement time, provides clear settlement boundaries that are especially important for institutional and compliance-oriented scenarios.
Arc's compliance framework design allows developers to integrate transfer controls, identity gating, and information disclosure mechanisms at the application-logic layer. This enables prediction market platforms operating in specific jurisdictions to be customized to local regulatory requirements—for example, restricting access for users from particular countries/regions, integrating KYC verification flows, or setting up audit trails for fund movements. However, the existence of compliance tools does not automatically resolve legal classification issues. The blockades in Indonesia, India, and other countries are based on the legal determination that prediction markets are "online gambling"; this determination applies regardless of what compliance framework the platform adopts. Arc's architecture is more helpful in addressing technical friction in institutional compliance scenarios (such as AML/KYC and cross-border fund movement), rather than trying to evade gambling laws in particular jurisdictions.
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