Circle Acquires Malachite to Power Its Upcoming Arc Blockchain
The USDC stablecoin issuer last week said it is building its own blockchain focused on stablecoin finances.

What to know:
- Circle has acquired consensus engine Malachite from development firm Informal Systems to support its new stablecoin-focused blockchain Arc.
- Several Informal Systems employees will join Circle, but the acquisition's financial details were not disclosed.
Stablecoin issuer Circle (CRCL) has acquired Malachite, the consensus engine that is set to underpin payments-focused blockchain Arc, from software development firm Informal Systems, according to a Monday press release.
The deal includes the underlying technology and intellectual property of Malachite, and nine persons from Informal Systems will join Circle, an Informal Systems spokespersons told CoinDesk. The firms didn't reveal details about pricing.
The deal comes as Circle, the company behind the $65 billion
Malachite was built around the Tendermint consensus algorithm and was designed for flexibility and correctness in decentralized systems. Informal Systems developed it as a reusable foundation for blockchain infrastructure, with a focus on performance and security.
Malachite will remain open source under the Apache 2.0 license, leaving developers free to use and extend the technology, the press release said. Informal will continue supporting other use cases for Malachite and advance its other projects, including tools for distributed systems and cross-chain infrastructure.
UPDATE (Aug. 18, 20:50 UTC): Adds acquisition details from Informal Systems spokesperson.
Read more: Why Circle and Stripe (And Many Others) Are Launching Their Own Blockchains