A press launch revealed on Christmas Eve claimed that Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, had launched a brand new platform providing tokenized gold and silver buying and selling.
Nevertheless, it’s “faux,” a Circle spokesperson informed CoinDesk.
The platform, launched below the identify “CircleMetals,” was promoted by way of a press launch distributed on Dec. 24, a date when many U.S. companies are closed or working at restricted capability, and response instances are slower.
The discharge described a brand new service enabling 24/7 swaps between USDC and purported gold (GLDC) and silver (SILC) tokens, supposedly backed by COMEX-linked liquidity. Oddly, it prompted customers to swap on the platform and obtain “1.25% in $CIRM rewards.” CoinDesk could not confirm the mentioned CIRM token, which does not seem like listed on main knowledge aggregators.
The web site has since been taken down. CoinDesk additionally did not discover any proof to counsel that GLDC or SILC tokens exist or that any authentic monetary establishment is concerned.
The web site asks customers to attach their wallets to allow their skill to swap for the supposed valuable metals tokens. It’s usually thought of a nasty thought to attach wallets on to unverified web sites, as malicious actors can then drain person wallets.

The discharge even used Circle branding and claimed to cite executives, together with CEO Jeremy Allaire.
A Circle spokesperson confirmed with CoinDesk that the location will not be actual.
Since CoinDesk’s reporting, Circle has warned customers on X to remain vigilant. “Please be alert and vigilant — confirm the legitimacy of requests earlier than taking motion, particularly when requested to attach your pockets. When unsure, double-check,” based on the submit.
The press launch asserting the product, distributed through some crypto-focused PR wires, consists of hyperlinks to what seems to be a swap platform that permits customers to attach their addresses and presents rewards for swaps of the supposed tokenized gold and silver tokens.
The weblog article, which resembles a press launch, was initially posted on a neighborhood discussion board [now deleted] after which subsequently shared on different web sites and by distributors. A PR company known as FinaCash approached Chainwire with the story, and the submit was swiftly taken down after additional compliance checks, a Chainwire spokesperson informed CoinDesk.
CORRECTION (Dec. 24, 20:30 UTC): Corrects to say Chainwire wasn’t the primary agency to distribute the press launch, and provides a chronological timeline of the occasion that passed off. Additionally updates the story to say that the web site promoted by the faux launch has been taken down, and provides Circle’s X submit to the story, warning customers.


