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Wikipedia

Stablecoin

A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency where the value of the digital asset is supposed to be pegged to a reference asset, which is either fiat money, exchange-traded commodities (such as precious metals or industrial metals), or another cryptocurrency.[1]

In theory, 1:1 backing by a reference asset could make a stablecoin value track the value of the peg and not be subject to the radical changes in value common in the market for many digital assets.[2] In practice, however, stablecoin issuers have yet to be proven to maintain adequate reserves to support a stable value and there have been a number of failures with investors losing the entirety of the (fiat currency) value of their holdings.

Background

Stablecoins have several purported purposes. They can be used for payments and are more likely to retain value than highly volatile cryptocurrencies. In practice, many stablecoins have failed to retain their "stable" value.[citation needed]

Stablecoins are typically non-interest bearing and therefore do not provide interest returns to the holder.[citation needed]

Reserve-backed stablecoins

Reserve-backed stablecoins are digital assets that are stabilized by other assets.[2] Furthermore, such coins, assuming they are managed in good faith and have a mechanism for redeeming the asset(s) backing them, are unlikely to drop below the value of the underlying physical asset, due to arbitrage. However, in practice, few, if any, stablecoins meet these assumptions.

Backed stablecoins are subject to the same volatility and risk associated with the backing asset. If the backed stablecoin is backed in a decentralized manner, they are relatively safe from predation, but if there is a central vault, it may be robbed or suffer loss of confidence.

Fiat-backed

The value of stablecoins of this type is based on the value of the backing currency, which is held by a third party–regulated financial entity. Fiat-backed stablecoins can be traded on exchanges and are redeemable from the issuer. The stability of the stablecoin is equivalent to the cost of maintaining the backing reserve and the cost of legal compliance, licenses, auditors, and the business infrastructure required by the regulator.

In this setting, the trust in the custodian of the backing asset is crucial for the stability of the stablecoin's price. If the issuer of the stablecoin does not actually possess the fiat necessary to make exchanges, the stablecoin can quickly lose value and become worthless.

The most popular stablecoin, Tether, initially claimed to be fully backed by fiat currency; this was proven to be untrue, and Tether was fined $41 million by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for deceiving consumers.[3] Instead, Tether only had enough fiat reserve to guarantee 27.6% of their stablecoin. Nevertheless, Tether still remains widely used.

Cryptocurrencies backed by fiat currency are the most common and were the first type of stablecoins on the market.[citation needed] Their characteristics are:

  • Their value is pegged to one or more currencies (most commonly the US dollar, the euro, and the Swiss franc) in a fixed ratio;
  • The value connection is realized off-chain through banks or other types of regulated financial institutions which serve as depositaries of the currency used to back the stablecoin;
  • The amount of the currency used to back the stablecoin should reflect the circulating supply of the stablecoin.

Examples: TrueUSD (TUSD),[4] USD Tether (USDT),[5] USD Coin,[citation needed] Monerium EURe.[6]

In January 2023, National Australia Bank (not Australia's central bank) announced that it would create by mid-2023 an Australian Dollar fiat-backed stablecoin called the AUDN, for streamlining cross-border banking transactions and trading carbon credits.[7]

Commodity-backed

The main characteristics of commodity-backed stablecoins are:

  • Their value is fixed to one or more commodities and redeemable for such (more or less) on demand;
  • There is an implied or explicit promise to redeem by unregulated individuals, agorist firms, or even regulated financial institutions;
  • The amount of commodity used to back the stablecoin should reflect the circulating supply of the stablecoin.

Holders of commodity-backed stablecoins can redeem their stablecoins at the conversion rate to take possession of the backing assets under whatever rules as to timing and amount are in place at the time of redemption. Maintaining the stability of the stablecoin is the cost of storing and protecting the commodity backing.[citation needed]

Cryptocurrency-backed

Cryptocurrency-backed stablecoins are issued with cryptocurrencies as collateral, conceptually similar to fiat-backed stablecoins. However, the significant difference between the two designs is that while fiat collateralization typically happens off the blockchain, the cryptocurrency or crypto asset used to back this type of stablecoins is done on the blockchain, using smart contracts in a more decentralized fashion. In many cases, these allow users to take out a loan against a smart contract via locking up collateral, making it more worthwhile to pay off their debt should the stablecoin ever decrease in value. In addition, to prevent sudden crashes, a user who takes out a loan may be liquidated by the smart contract should their collateral decrease too close to the value of their withdrawal.

Significant features of crypto backed stablecoins are:

  • The value of the stablecoin is collateralized by another cryptocurrency or a cryptocurrency portfolio;
  • The peg is executed on-chain via smart contracts;
  • The supply of the stablecoins is regulated on-chain, using smart contracts;
  • price stability is achieved by introducing supplementary instruments and incentives, not just the collateral.

The technical implementation of this type of stablecoins is more complex and varied than that of the fiat-collateralized kind, which introduces a greater risk of exploits due to bugs in the smart contract code. With the tethering done on-chain, it is not subject to third-party regulation creating a decentralized solution. The potentially problematic aspect of this type of stablecoins is the change in the value of the collateral and the reliance on supplementary instruments. The complexity and non-direct backing of the stablecoin may deter usage, as it may take time to comprehend how the price is ensured. Due to the highly volatile and convergent cryptocurrency market, substantial collateral must also be maintained to ensure stability.

Live stablecoins projects of this type are Havven (the pair: nUSD – stablecoin and HAV – the collateral-backed nUSD),[8] DAI (pair: CDP – Collateralized Debt Position and MKR – governance token used to control the supply)[9] and others. There is also Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC), see BitGo.

Seigniorage-style/algorithmic stablecoins (not backed)

Seigniorage-style coins, also known as algorithmic stablecoins, utilize algorithms to control the stablecoin's money supply, similar to a central bank's approach to printing and destroying currency. Seigniorage-based stablecoins are a less popular form of stablecoin.[10]

Algorithmic stablecoins are a type of stablecoin intended to hold a stable value over the long term because of particular computer algorithms and game theory rather than a peg to a reserve asset.[11] In practice, some algorithmic stablecoins have yet to maintain price stability. For example, the "UST" asset on the Terra blockchain was theoretically supported by a reserve asset called "Luna", and plummeted in value in May 2022. Wired magazine said, "The Ponzinomics were just too obvious: When you pay money for nothing, and stash your nothing in a protocol with the expectation that it will give you a 20 percent yield—all you end up with is 20 percent of nothing."[11]

Significant features of seigniorage-style stablecoins are:[10]

  • Adjustments are made on-chain,
  • No collateral is needed to mint coins,
  • Value is controlled by supply and demand through algorithms, stabilizing the price.

Basis was one example of a seigniorage-style coin.[10]

TerraUSD (UST), created by Do Kwon, was meant to maintain a 1:1 peg with the United States dollar.[12] Instead of being backed by dollars, UST was designed to keep its peg through a complex system connected with another Terra network token, Terra (LUNA).[13] In May 2022 UST broke its peg with its price plunging to 10 cents,[14] while LUNA fell to "virtually zero", down from an all-time high of $119.51.[15] The collapse wiped out almost $45 billion of market capitalization over the course of a week.[16]

On 13 June 2022, Tron's algorithmic stablecoin, USDD, lost its peg to the US Dollar.[17]

Possible advantages

The Bank of International Settlements lists the possible merits of the subject as enhancement of anti-money laundering efforts, operational resilience, customer data protection, financial inclusion, tax compliance, and cybersecurity.[18]

Risks and criticisms

Limitations on regulation

Nellie Liang, Under Secretary of the Treasury for Domestic Finance reported to the Senate banking committee that the rapid growth of the stablecoin market capitalization and its potential for financial services innovation require urgent Congressional regulation.[19]

Although US legislation is progressing in May 2024 to provide increased regulatory clarity for many digital assets, the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act in its current form excludes certain stablecoins from regulation by the SEC, "except for fraud and certain activities by registered firms", and is specifically excluded from regulation by the CFTC.[20]

Lack of transparency

Tether is currently the world's largest market capitalization stablecoin. It has been accused of failing to produce audits for reserves used to collateralize the quantity of minted USDT stablecoin.[21] Tether has since issued assurance reports on USDT backing, although some speculation persists.[22]

De-pegging

Many projects can advance a product and call it a stablecoin. Thus, despite the name, many stablecoins have historically needed more stability because digital assets can be built to many different standards. Stablecoins such as TerraUSD, USDD, DEI and others crashed to zero in 2022 alone.[citation needed]

Other concerns

Griffin and Shams' research attributed the creation of unbacked USDT to the rise in Bitcoin's price in 2017.[23] Following that, research indicated little to no evidence that Tether USD minting events influenced Bitcoin values unless they were publicized to the public by Whale Alert.[24][25][26]

Failed and abandoned stablecoin projects

A number of stablecoins have crashed or lost their peg. For example:

  • The stablecoin project Basis, which had received over $100 million in venture capital funding, shut down in December 2018, citing concerns about US regulation.[27]
  • On 11 May 2022, Terra's stablecoin UST fell from $1 to 26 cents.[28][29] The subsequent failure of Terraform Labs resulted in the loss of nearly $40B invested in the Terra and Luna coins.[30] In September 2022, South Korean prosecutors requested the issuance of an Interpol Red Notice against the company's founder, Do Kwon.[31]
  • Diem (formerly Libra) was abandoned by Facebook/Meta and later purchased by Silvergate Capital.

References

  1. ^ "Rise of Crypto Market's Quiet Giants Has Big Market Implications". Bloomberg.com. 19 March 2021. from the original on 2021-11-26. Retrieved 2021-04-18.
  2. ^ a b "Stable Coin Backed by Circle, Coinbase Draws Most Early Demand". Bloomberg.com. 29 October 2018. from the original on 2020-06-06. Retrieved 2021-04-18.
  3. ^ "CFTC Orders Tether and Bitfinex to Pay Fines Totaling $42.5 Million | CFTC".
  4. ^ "Why Facebook Chose Stablecoins as Its Path to Crypto". Bloomberg. January 27, 2019. from the original on November 27, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2019.
  5. ^ Tether. "Tether: Fiat currencies on the Bitcoin blockchain" (PDF). Tether: Fiat Currencies on the Bitcoin Blockchain: 7. (PDF) from the original on 2022-01-26. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
  6. ^ Liao, Rita (2023-07-17). "Gnosis launches Visa card that lets you spend self-custody crypto in Europe, soon US and Hong Kong". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2023-08-27.
  7. ^ "National Australia Bank joins stablecoin bandwagon, to launch fiat-backed digital currency by mid-2023". India Today. 19 January 2023. from the original on 20 January 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  8. ^ Brooks, Samuel; Jurisevic, Anton; Spain, Michael; Warwick, Kain (2018-06-11). (PDF). A Decentralised Payment Network and Stablecoin V0.8: 6–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-11-19. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
  9. ^ "The Dai Stablecoin System". from the original on 2018-10-24. Retrieved 2018-10-23.
  10. ^ a b c Memon, Bilal (23 August 2018). "Guide to Stablecoin: Types of Stablecoins & Its Importance". from the original on 23 October 2018. Retrieved 22 Oct 2018.
  11. ^ a b Volpicelli, Gian M. (12 May 2022). "Terra's Crypto Meltdown Was Inevitable". Wired. from the original on 1 January 2023. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  12. ^ "Controversial stablecoin UST — which is meant to be pegged to the dollar — plummets below 50 cents". CNBC. 11 May 2022. from the original on 11 May 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  13. ^ "Yellen cites UST stablecoin risk after it loses its dollar peg". Protocol. 10 May 2022. from the original on 13 May 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  14. ^ "The crypto crash rivals both the internet bubble burst and the Great Financial Crisis, Bank of America says". Fortune. from the original on 16 May 2022. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  15. ^ "Terraform Again Halts Blockchain Behind UST Stablecoin, Luna". Bloomberg News. 13 May 2022. from the original on 13 May 2022. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  16. ^ "Terra $45 Billion Face Plant Creates Crowd of Crypto Losers". Bloomberg News. 14 May 2022. from the original on 16 May 2022. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  17. ^ "Another algorithmic stablecoin loses its peg as Tron's USDD falls, with founder Justin Sun vowing to deploy $2 billion". Fortune. from the original on 2022-06-15. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
  18. ^ G7Working Group on Stablecoins. Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructure. (18 October 2019). "CPMI Papers: Investigating the impact of global stablecoins". Bank of International Settlements website 2021-01-16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  19. ^ Allyson Versprille and Jesse Hamilton. (8 February 2022). "Treasury Official Says the Need for Stablecoin Legislation Is ‘Urgent’". Bloomberg website 2022-02-21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  20. ^ Alois, JD (10 May 2024). "House Digital Asset Legislation, the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act, Takes Another Step Forward". Crowdfund Insider. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  21. ^ Faux, Zeke (7 October 2021). "Anyone Seen Tether's Billions?". Bloomberg. from the original on 7 October 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  22. ^ Emily, Nicolle (27 July 2022). "Tether Says There Is No Chinese Commercial Paper Among Its Reserves". Bloomberg. from the original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  23. ^ Griffin, John M.; Shams, Amin (15 June 2020). "Is Bitcoin Really Untethered?". The Journal of Finance. 75 (4): 1913–1964. doi:10.1111/jofi.12903. ISSN 0022-1082. S2CID 229576274.
  24. ^ Saggu, A (1 October 2022). "The Intraday Bitcoin Response to Tether Minting and Burning Events: Asymmetry, Investor Sentiment, and "Whale Alerts" on Twitter". Finance Research Letters. 49: 103096. doi:10.1016/j.frl.2022.103096. ISSN 1544-6123. S2CID 250082279.
  25. ^ Lyons, Richard K.; Viswanath-Natraj, Ganesh (17 April 2020). "Stable coins don't inflate crypto markets". VoxEU.org. from the original on 14 May 2022. Retrieved 2022-07-04.
  26. ^ Cai, Justin (18 November 2019). "Data Analysis: Tether Manipulation Did Not Cause Bitcoin's 2017 Bull Run". Longhash Research. from the original on 24 January 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  27. ^ "Cryptocurrency project Basis to shut down and return funding to investors". Reuters. 13 Dec 2018. from the original on 30 December 2018. Retrieved 30 Dec 2018.
  28. ^ Denton, Jack. "How a Digital Token Designed to be Stable Fueled a Crypto Crash". www.barrons.com. from the original on 12 May 2022. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
  29. ^ "Turmoil and panic in crypto market as 'stablecoin' slump prompts wider collapse". the Guardian. 12 May 2022. from the original on 12 May 2022. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
  30. ^ "South Korean founder of failed cryptocurrency Terra denies he is 'on the run'". the Guardian. Agence France-Presse. 18 September 2022. from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
  31. ^ "South Korean prosecutors ask Interpol to issue red notice for Do Kwon". Financial Times. 19 September 2022. from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.

stablecoin, stablecoin, type, cryptocurrency, where, value, digital, asset, supposed, pegged, reference, asset, which, either, fiat, money, exchange, traded, commodities, such, precious, metals, industrial, metals, another, cryptocurrency, theory, backing, ref. A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency where the value of the digital asset is supposed to be pegged to a reference asset which is either fiat money exchange traded commodities such as precious metals or industrial metals or another cryptocurrency 1 In theory 1 1 backing by a reference asset could make a stablecoin value track the value of the peg and not be subject to the radical changes in value common in the market for many digital assets 2 In practice however stablecoin issuers have yet to be proven to maintain adequate reserves to support a stable value and there have been a number of failures with investors losing the entirety of the fiat currency value of their holdings Contents 1 Background 2 Reserve backed stablecoins 2 1 Fiat backed 2 2 Commodity backed 2 3 Cryptocurrency backed 3 Seigniorage style algorithmic stablecoins not backed 4 Possible advantages 5 Risks and criticisms 5 1 Limitations on regulation 5 2 Lack of transparency 5 3 De pegging 5 4 Other concerns 6 Failed and abandoned stablecoin projects 7 ReferencesBackgroundStablecoins have several purported purposes They can be used for payments and are more likely to retain value than highly volatile cryptocurrencies In practice many stablecoins have failed to retain their stable value citation needed Stablecoins are typically non interest bearing and therefore do not provide interest returns to the holder citation needed Reserve backed stablecoinsReserve backed stablecoins are digital assets that are stabilized by other assets 2 Furthermore such coins assuming they are managed in good faith and have a mechanism for redeeming the asset s backing them are unlikely to drop below the value of the underlying physical asset due to arbitrage However in practice few if any stablecoins meet these assumptions Backed stablecoins are subject to the same volatility and risk associated with the backing asset If the backed stablecoin is backed in a decentralized manner they are relatively safe from predation but if there is a central vault it may be robbed or suffer loss of confidence Fiat backed The value of stablecoins of this type is based on the value of the backing currency which is held by a third party regulated financial entity Fiat backed stablecoins can be traded on exchanges and are redeemable from the issuer The stability of the stablecoin is equivalent to the cost of maintaining the backing reserve and the cost of legal compliance licenses auditors and the business infrastructure required by the regulator In this setting the trust in the custodian of the backing asset is crucial for the stability of the stablecoin s price If the issuer of the stablecoin does not actually possess the fiat necessary to make exchanges the stablecoin can quickly lose value and become worthless The most popular stablecoin Tether initially claimed to be fully backed by fiat currency this was proven to be untrue and Tether was fined 41 million by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for deceiving consumers 3 Instead Tether only had enough fiat reserve to guarantee 27 6 of their stablecoin Nevertheless Tether still remains widely used Cryptocurrencies backed by fiat currency are the most common and were the first type of stablecoins on the market citation needed Their characteristics are Their value is pegged to one or more currencies most commonly the US dollar the euro and the Swiss franc in a fixed ratio The value connection is realized off chain through banks or other types of regulated financial institutions which serve as depositaries of the currency used to back the stablecoin The amount of the currency used to back the stablecoin should reflect the circulating supply of the stablecoin Examples TrueUSD TUSD 4 USD Tether USDT 5 USD Coin citation needed Monerium EURe 6 In January 2023 National Australia Bank not Australia s central bank announced that it would create by mid 2023 an Australian Dollar fiat backed stablecoin called the AUDN for streamlining cross border banking transactions and trading carbon credits 7 Commodity backed The main characteristics of commodity backed stablecoins are Their value is fixed to one or more commodities and redeemable for such more or less on demand There is an implied or explicit promise to redeem by unregulated individuals agorist firms or even regulated financial institutions The amount of commodity used to back the stablecoin should reflect the circulating supply of the stablecoin Holders of commodity backed stablecoins can redeem their stablecoins at the conversion rate to take possession of the backing assets under whatever rules as to timing and amount are in place at the time of redemption Maintaining the stability of the stablecoin is the cost of storing and protecting the commodity backing citation needed Cryptocurrency backed Cryptocurrency backed stablecoins are issued with cryptocurrencies as collateral conceptually similar to fiat backed stablecoins However the significant difference between the two designs is that while fiat collateralization typically happens off the blockchain the cryptocurrency or crypto asset used to back this type of stablecoins is done on the blockchain using smart contracts in a more decentralized fashion In many cases these allow users to take out a loan against a smart contract via locking up collateral making it more worthwhile to pay off their debt should the stablecoin ever decrease in value In addition to prevent sudden crashes a user who takes out a loan may be liquidated by the smart contract should their collateral decrease too close to the value of their withdrawal Significant features of crypto backed stablecoins are The value of the stablecoin is collateralized by another cryptocurrency or a cryptocurrency portfolio The peg is executed on chain via smart contracts The supply of the stablecoins is regulated on chain using smart contracts price stability is achieved by introducing supplementary instruments and incentives not just the collateral The technical implementation of this type of stablecoins is more complex and varied than that of the fiat collateralized kind which introduces a greater risk of exploits due to bugs in the smart contract code With the tethering done on chain it is not subject to third party regulation creating a decentralized solution The potentially problematic aspect of this type of stablecoins is the change in the value of the collateral and the reliance on supplementary instruments The complexity and non direct backing of the stablecoin may deter usage as it may take time to comprehend how the price is ensured Due to the highly volatile and convergent cryptocurrency market substantial collateral must also be maintained to ensure stability Live stablecoins projects of this type are Havven the pair nUSD stablecoin and HAV the collateral backed nUSD 8 DAI pair CDP Collateralized Debt Position and MKR governance token used to control the supply 9 and others There is also Wrapped Bitcoin WBTC see BitGo Seigniorage style algorithmic stablecoins not backed Seigniorage style coins also known as algorithmic stablecoins utilize algorithms to control the stablecoin s money supply similar to a central bank s approach to printing and destroying currency Seigniorage based stablecoins are a less popular form of stablecoin 10 Algorithmic stablecoins are a type of stablecoin intended to hold a stable value over the long term because of particular computer algorithms and game theory rather than a peg to a reserve asset 11 In practice some algorithmic stablecoins have yet to maintain price stability For example the UST asset on the Terra blockchain was theoretically supported by a reserve asset called Luna and plummeted in value in May 2022 Wired magazine said The Ponzinomics were just too obvious When you pay money for nothing and stash your nothing in a protocol with the expectation that it will give you a 20 percent yield all you end up with is 20 percent of nothing 11 Significant features of seigniorage style stablecoins are 10 Adjustments are made on chain No collateral is needed to mint coins Value is controlled by supply and demand through algorithms stabilizing the price Basis was one example of a seigniorage style coin 10 TerraUSD UST created by Do Kwon was meant to maintain a 1 1 peg with the United States dollar 12 Instead of being backed by dollars UST was designed to keep its peg through a complex system connected with another Terra network token Terra LUNA 13 In May 2022 UST broke its peg with its price plunging to 10 cents 14 while LUNA fell to virtually zero down from an all time high of 119 51 15 The collapse wiped out almost 45 billion of market capitalization over the course of a week 16 On 13 June 2022 Tron s algorithmic stablecoin USDD lost its peg to the US Dollar 17 Possible advantagesThe Bank of International Settlements lists the possible merits of the subject as enhancement of anti money laundering efforts operational resilience customer data protection financial inclusion tax compliance and cybersecurity 18 Risks and criticismsLimitations on regulation Nellie Liang Under Secretary of the Treasury for Domestic Finance reported to the Senate banking committee that the rapid growth of the stablecoin market capitalization and its potential for financial services innovation require urgent Congressional regulation 19 Although US legislation is progressing in May 2024 to provide increased regulatory clarity for many digital assets the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act in its current form excludes certain stablecoins from regulation by the SEC except for fraud and certain activities by registered firms and is specifically excluded from regulation by the CFTC 20 Lack of transparency Tether is currently the world s largest market capitalization stablecoin It has been accused of failing to produce audits for reserves used to collateralize the quantity of minted USDT stablecoin 21 Tether has since issued assurance reports on USDT backing although some speculation persists 22 De pegging Many projects can advance a product and call it a stablecoin Thus despite the name many stablecoins have historically needed more stability because digital assets can be built to many different standards Stablecoins such as TerraUSD USDD DEI and others crashed to zero in 2022 alone citation needed Other concerns Griffin and Shams research attributed the creation of unbacked USDT to the rise in Bitcoin s price in 2017 23 Following that research indicated little to no evidence that Tether USD minting events influenced Bitcoin values unless they were publicized to the public by Whale Alert 24 25 26 Failed and abandoned stablecoin projectsA number of stablecoins have crashed or lost their peg For example The stablecoin project Basis which had received over 100 million in venture capital funding shut down in December 2018 citing concerns about US regulation 27 On 11 May 2022 Terra s stablecoin UST fell from 1 to 26 cents 28 29 The subsequent failure of Terraform Labs resulted in the loss of nearly 40B invested in the Terra and Luna coins 30 In September 2022 South Korean prosecutors requested the issuance of an Interpol Red Notice against the company s founder Do Kwon 31 Diem formerly Libra was abandoned by Facebook Meta and later purchased by Silvergate Capital References Rise of Crypto Market s Quiet Giants Has Big Market Implications Bloomberg com 19 March 2021 Archived from the original on 2021 11 26 Retrieved 2021 04 18 a b Stable Coin Backed by Circle Coinbase Draws Most Early Demand Bloomberg com 29 October 2018 Archived from the original on 2020 06 06 Retrieved 2021 04 18 CFTC Orders Tether and Bitfinex to Pay Fines Totaling 42 5 Million CFTC Why Facebook Chose Stablecoins as Its Path to Crypto Bloomberg January 27 2019 Archived from the original on November 27 2021 Retrieved August 30 2019 Tether Tether Fiat currencies on the Bitcoin blockchain PDF Tether Fiat Currencies on the Bitcoin Blockchain 7 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 01 26 Retrieved 2018 10 23 Liao Rita 2023 07 17 Gnosis launches Visa card that lets you spend self custody crypto in Europe soon US and Hong Kong TechCrunch Retrieved 2023 08 27 National Australia Bank joins stablecoin bandwagon to launch fiat backed digital currency by mid 2023 India Today 19 January 2023 Archived from the original on 20 January 2023 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Brooks Samuel Jurisevic Anton Spain Michael Warwick Kain 2018 06 11 A decentralised payment network and stablecoin PDF A Decentralised Payment Network and Stablecoin V0 8 6 9 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 11 19 Retrieved 2018 10 23 The Dai Stablecoin System Archived from the original on 2018 10 24 Retrieved 2018 10 23 a b c Memon Bilal 23 August 2018 Guide to Stablecoin Types of Stablecoins amp Its Importance Archived from the original on 23 October 2018 Retrieved 22 Oct 2018 a b Volpicelli Gian M 12 May 2022 Terra s Crypto Meltdown Was Inevitable Wired Archived from the original on 1 January 2023 Retrieved 19 January 2023 Controversial stablecoin UST which is meant to be pegged to the dollar plummets below 50 cents CNBC 11 May 2022 Archived from the original on 11 May 2022 Retrieved 11 May 2022 Yellen cites UST stablecoin risk after it loses its dollar peg Protocol 10 May 2022 Archived from the original on 13 May 2022 Retrieved 11 May 2022 The crypto crash rivals both the internet bubble burst and the Great Financial Crisis Bank of America says Fortune Archived from the original on 16 May 2022 Retrieved 16 May 2022 Terraform Again Halts Blockchain Behind UST Stablecoin Luna Bloomberg News 13 May 2022 Archived from the original on 13 May 2022 Retrieved 13 May 2022 Terra 45 Billion Face Plant Creates Crowd of Crypto Losers Bloomberg News 14 May 2022 Archived from the original on 16 May 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Another algorithmic stablecoin loses its peg as Tron s USDD falls with founder Justin Sun vowing to deploy 2 billion Fortune Archived from the original on 2022 06 15 Retrieved 2022 06 14 G7Working Group on Stablecoins Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructure 18 October 2019 CPMI Papers Investigating the impact of global stablecoins Bank of International Settlements website Archived 2021 01 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 23 January 2021 Allyson Versprille and Jesse Hamilton 8 February 2022 Treasury Official Says the Need for Stablecoin Legislation Is Urgent Bloomberg website Archived 2022 02 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 February 2022 Alois JD 10 May 2024 House Digital Asset Legislation the Financial Innovation and Technology for the 21st Century Act Takes Another Step Forward Crowdfund Insider Retrieved 14 May 2024 Faux Zeke 7 October 2021 Anyone Seen Tether s Billions Bloomberg Archived from the original on 7 October 2021 Retrieved 9 August 2021 Emily Nicolle 27 July 2022 Tether Says There Is No Chinese Commercial Paper Among Its Reserves Bloomberg Archived from the original on 21 January 2023 Retrieved 9 August 2022 Griffin John M Shams Amin 15 June 2020 Is Bitcoin Really Untethered The Journal of Finance 75 4 1913 1964 doi 10 1111 jofi 12903 ISSN 0022 1082 S2CID 229576274 Saggu A 1 October 2022 The Intraday Bitcoin Response to Tether Minting and Burning Events Asymmetry Investor Sentiment and Whale Alerts on Twitter Finance Research Letters 49 103096 doi 10 1016 j frl 2022 103096 ISSN 1544 6123 S2CID 250082279 Lyons Richard K Viswanath Natraj Ganesh 17 April 2020 Stable coins don t inflate crypto markets VoxEU org Archived from the original on 14 May 2022 Retrieved 2022 07 04 Cai Justin 18 November 2019 Data Analysis Tether Manipulation Did Not Cause Bitcoin s 2017 Bull Run Longhash Research Archived from the original on 24 January 2021 Retrieved 18 July 2022 Cryptocurrency project Basis to shut down and return funding to investors Reuters 13 Dec 2018 Archived from the original on 30 December 2018 Retrieved 30 Dec 2018 Denton Jack How a Digital Token Designed to be Stable Fueled a Crypto Crash www barrons com Archived from the original on 12 May 2022 Retrieved 12 May 2022 Turmoil and panic in crypto market as stablecoin slump prompts wider collapse the Guardian 12 May 2022 Archived from the original on 12 May 2022 Retrieved 12 May 2022 South Korean founder of failed cryptocurrency Terra denies he is on the run the Guardian Agence France Presse 18 September 2022 Archived from the original on 19 September 2022 Retrieved 19 September 2022 South Korean prosecutors ask Interpol to issue red notice for Do Kwon Financial Times 19 September 2022 Archived from the original on 19 September 2022 Retrieved 19 September 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stablecoin amp oldid 1224019912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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