Tag Archives: Stablecoins

Banks collapsing; stablecoins depegging — What is happening? Watch The Market Report live – Cointelegraph

  1. Banks collapsing; stablecoins depegging — What is happening? Watch The Market Report live Cointelegraph
  2. Bitcoin nears $26K, and Binance halts UK customer deposits and withdrawals: CNBC Crypto World CNBC Television
  3. Crypto Must Do Better to Be Banked, Say Industry Executives CoinDesk
  4. Signature Bank Shuttered: The Crypto Bros Are Fast Becoming Unbankable Bloomberg
  5. ‘U.S. Senate’s banking panel chairman: Congress unlikely to tighten banking rules’ -Reuters – SPDR S&P 500 (ARCA:SPY), SPDR S&P Bank ETF (ARCA:KBE), SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (ARCA:KRE) Benzinga
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US Fed to create new crypto team amid concerns about unregulated stablecoins – Cointelegraph

  1. US Fed to create new crypto team amid concerns about unregulated stablecoins Cointelegraph
  2. U.S. Federal Reserve Creating ‘Specialized Team of Experts’ on Crypto, According to Vice Chair The Daily Hodl
  3. Fed Assembling Special Crypto Squad As Silvergate Collapse Unnerves Investors Benzinga
  4. The Federal Reserve Pushes Hard To Rein In Crypto Stablecoins Crypto Mode
  5. US Accounting Watchdog Issues Warning on Crypto Proof-of-Reserve Audits: Investors Urged to Exercise Caution – Bitcoin News Bitcoin News
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US Fed to create new crypto team amid concerns about unregulated stablecoins – Cointelegraph

  1. US Fed to create new crypto team amid concerns about unregulated stablecoins Cointelegraph
  2. U.S. Federal Reserve Creating ‘Specialized Team of Experts’ on Crypto, According to Vice Chair The Daily Hodl
  3. Fed Assembling Special Crypto Squad As Silvergate Collapse Unnerves Investors Benzinga
  4. The Federal Reserve Pushes Hard To Rein In Crypto Stablecoins Crypto Mode
  5. US Accounting Watchdog Issues Warning on Crypto Proof-of-Reserve Audits: Investors Urged to Exercise Caution – Bitcoin News Bitcoin News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UST debacle will ‘probably be the end’ of algorithmic stablecoins

Luna, the sister cryptocurrency of controversial stablecoin TerraUSD, dropped to $0. The collapse of the algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD has raised question about the future survival of similar crypto assets.

Dan Kitwood | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Algorithmic stablecoins like terraUSD, which collapsed and sent shockwaves through the cryptocurrency market, are unlikely to survive, the co-founder of digital currency tether told CNBC.

Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency that is usually pegged to a real-world asset. TerraUSD or UST, is an algorithmic stablecoin which was supposed to be pegged to the U.S. dollar.

Whereas stablecoins like tether and USD Coin are backed by real-world assets such as fiat currencies and government bonds in order to maintain their dollar peg, UST was governed by an algorithm.

UST lost its dollar peg and that also led to a sell-off for its sister token luna, which crashed to $0.

The debacle has led to warnings that algorithmic stablecoins might not have a future.

“It’s unfortunate that the money … was lost, however, it’s not a surprise. It’s an algorithmic-backed, stablecoin. So it’s just a bunch of smart people trying to figure out how to peg something to the dollar,” Reeve Collins, the co-founder of digital token company BLOCKv, told CNBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last week.

“And a lot of people pulled out their money in the last few months, because they realized that it wasn’t sustainable. So that crash kind of had a cascade effect. And it will probably be the end of most algo stablecoins.”

Collins is also the co-founder of tether, which is not an algorithmic stablecoin. But tether’s issuer claims it is backed by cash, U.S. Treasurys and corporate bonds. In the crypto market turmoil last month, tether also briefly lost its dollar peg before regaining it.

Jeremy Allaire, CEO of Circle, one of the companies behind the issuance of the USDC stablecoin, said he thinks people will continue to work on algorithmic stablecoins.

“I’ve compared algorithmic stable coins to the Fountain of Youth or the Holy Grail. Others have referred to it as financial alchemy. And so there will continue to be financial alchemists who, who work on the magic potion to to create these things, and to find … the Holy Grail of a stable value, algorithmic digital currency. So I fully expect continued pursuit of that,” Allaire told CNBC last week.

“Now, what happens with regulation around it is a different question. Are there going to be, you know, clear lines drawn about what can interact with the market. What can interact with … the financial system, given the risks that are embedded,” he added.

Regulation ahead

The crytpo industry is expecting tougher regulation on stablecoins, especially after terraUSD’s collapse. Bertrand Perez, CEO of the Web3 Foundation and a former director of the Facebook-backed Diem stablecoin project, expects regulators to demand that such cryptocurrencies are backed by real assets.

“So I expect that once we have a clear regulation of stablecoins, the basic rules of the regulation would be that you have a clear reserve with a set of assets that are strong, that you’re subject to regular audits of those reserves,” Perez told CNBC last week.

“So you can have an auditing company that comes regularly to make sure that you have the proper reserves, that you have also the proper processes and measures in order to face bank runs and other, let’s say, negative market conditions, to make sure that your reserve is really secure, not only when everything goes well.”

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UK plans new safeguards for stablecoins after Terra collapse

The world’s biggest stablecoin, tether, saw more than $10 billion in redemptions in May, fueling fears of a 2008-style “bank run.”

Justin Tallis | AFP via Getty Images

Britain wants to make sure stablecoins don’t end up threatening the wider financial system following the collapse of controversial crypto project Terra.

The government on Tuesday proposed amending existing rules to manage the failure of stablecoin firms that may pose a “systemic” risk. The proposal is separate from previously announced plans to regulate stablecoins under laws governing electronic payments.

“Since the initial commitment to regulate certain types of stablecoins, events in cryptoasset markets have further highlighted the need for appropriate regulation to help mitigate consumer, market integrity and financial stability risks,” the government said in a consultation paper setting out its proposals.

“The government considers that it is important to ensure existing legal frameworks can be effectively applied to manage the risks posed by the possible failure of systemic DSA [digital settlement asset] firms for the purposes of financial stability.”

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies whose value is pegged to a traditional asset, most often the U.S. dollar. TerraUSD, a so-called “algorithmic” stablecoin, was meant to follow this arrangement using a mix of code and partial backing from bitcoin and other digital tokens. But it imploded earlier this month, taking an associated token called luna tumbling with it. Panic over the debacle has erased hundreds of billions of dollars from the entire crypto market.

That has, in turn, caused concern for regulators, who are worried about the risks posed by stablecoins to the broader financial system. Tether, the world’s biggest stablecoin, saw more than $10 billion in redemptions in the weeks following Terra’s collapse, fueling fears of a 2008-style “bank run” with knock-on effects for other financial markets. Though Tether says its token is fully backed by assets held in a reserve, critics remain unconvinced and have called for a full audit.

The government is looking to implement additional safeguards to existing legislation around insolvency of firms operating key financial market infrastructure. Such a provision would take into account the return or transfer of the private keys that protect users’ funds. The Bank of England would serve as the lead regulator enforcing the rules. A consultation on the proposal is currently underway and will close on Aug. 2.

Glen Goodman, an independent crypto trader, said the proposal was “pretty dramatic.”

The government has “effectively accepted that some stablecoins may become as systemically important as banks and so should be treated as special cases and assisted if they’re failing,” he said.

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Top Stablecoins Shed $7B In May As Traders Redeem Tokens En Masse

  • Stablecoin holders are exchanging their tokens for cash, in some cases reducing the coins’ overall supply
  • Tether and DAI have shrunk the most throughout May so far

The top four stablecoins by market capitalization have lost nearly $7 billion from their collective supplies this month, as big money traders seek to redeem their tokens for cash.

Stablecoins Tether (USDT), Circle’s USD Coin (USDC), Binance USD (BUSD), and DAI together boasted nearly $159 billion supply at the start of May.

Intense market volatility and reduced risk tolerance in light of Terra’s collapse has sent that figure below $152 billion — a drop of more than 4%.

MakerDAO’s overcollateralized stablecoin DAI has lost the most supply this month on a percentage basis. Its market value on May 1 was $8.5 billion, according to CoinGecko data. Now, it’s a little over $6.2 billion — representing a 26% fall.

USDT was the second-hardest-hit. The largest stablecoin has shrunk by $9 billion in the month-to-date, an 11% drop. Bitcoin’s price fell around 25% in that time while ether crumbled by 30%.

USDT and USDC holders can exchange their tokens for US dollars from Tether and Circle respectively at a 1:1 ratio. Low demand leads to those redeemed tokens being burned.

BUSD users, however, can’t redeem their tokens via Binance directly. White-label stablecoin issuer Paxos handles BUSD redemptions instead. DAI is more decentralized — users can only redeem tokens for collateral under certain emergency conditions.

USDC and BUSD have actually grown throughout May’s market turmoil. USDC’s market value has jumped almost 7.5% — from more than $49 billion to a tad less than $53 billion. This is despite losing more than $3 billion from its market value throughout March and April.

Crypto exchange Binance’s stablecoin offering has added 5.5% so far this month; its market value rising from around $17.7 billion to $18.6 billion at press time.

At Blockworks’ Permissionless conference in Palm Beach on Wednesday, Circle’s Joao Reginatto told the crowd the stablecoin issuer had redeemed $7 billion USDC last week, equal to 11% of Circle’s total redemptions from 2021. 

But while May has seen the top stablecoins shrink, their total market value is still up 5.5% in the year-to-date, having added almost $8 billion.

USDC has grown 20% with $10.6 billion more tokens in circulation. BUSD boosted up 22% — representing growth of $4.2 billion. USDT has shed about $4.1 billion, a 5% reduction, while DAI dwindled by 30% — from $8.9 billion to $6.2 billion.


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  • David Canellis

    Blockworks

    Editor

    David Canellis is an editor and journalist based in Amsterdam who has covered the crypto industry full time since 2018. He’s heavily focused on data-driven reporting to identify and map trends within the ecosystem, from bitcoin to DeFi, crypto stocks to NFTs and beyond. Contact David via email at [email protected]

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SEC Commissioner Expects Tighter Stablecoin Regulation — Yellen Says Stablecoins Not Real Threat to Financial Stability – Regulation Bitcoin News

A commissioner with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) expects to see stricter regulation on stablecoins. However, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says stablecoins are currently “not a real threat” to the country’s financial stability.

SEC Commissioner on Stablecoin Regulation

The regulation of stablecoins has been a hot topic this week following the Terra fiasco which saw UST losing its U.S. dollar peg and LUNA plunging to near zero.

A commissioner with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Hester Peirce, talked about cryptocurrency regulation Thursday during an event hosted by the London-based Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum policy think tank.

Peirce, who is known in the crypto community as “crypto mom,” indicated that tighter regulations on cryptocurrency, particularly stablecoins, could be coming soon. She was quoted as saying:

One place we might see some movement is around stablecoins … That’s an area that has obviously this week gotten a lot of attention.

Lawmakers to Work With Treasury Department on Stablecoin Regulation

U.S. lawmakers have emphasized the urgent need for stablecoin regulation. In her testimony before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs this week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen stressed that it is important and urgent for Congress to pass legislation governing payment stablecoins.

Yellen also testified before the House Financial Services Committee this week, stating that for stablecoins:

I wouldn’t characterize it at this scale as a real threat to financial stability, but they’re growing very rapidly and they present the same kind of risks that we have known for centuries in connection with bank runs.

Both the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) and the Federal Reserve Board have warned about the risks of stablecoin runs that threaten the country’s financial stability.

Do you think stablecoins should be regulated urgently? Let us know in the comments section below.

Kevin Helms

A student of Austrian Economics, Kevin found Bitcoin in 2011 and has been an evangelist ever since. His interests lie in Bitcoin security, open-source systems, network effects and the intersection between economics and cryptography.

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Risks of Crypto Stablecoins Attract Attention of Yellen, Fed and SEC

Stablecoins, digital currencies pegged to national currencies like the U.S. dollar, are increasingly seen as a potential risk not just to crypto markets, but to the capital markets as well.

Treasury Secretary

Janet Yellen

is scheduled Monday to hold a meeting of the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets to discuss stablecoins, the Treasury Department said Friday. The group includes the heads of the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

“Bringing together regulators will enable us to assess the potential benefits of stablecoins while mitigating risks they could pose to users, markets, or the financial system,” Ms. Yellen said in a statement.

Stablecoins are a key source of liquidity for cryptocurrency exchanges, their largest users, which need to process trades 24 hours a day. In the derivatives and decentralized finance markets, stablecoins are used by traders and speculators as collateral, and many contracts pay out in stablecoins.

Stablecoins have exploded over the past year as cryptocurrency trading has taken off. The value of the three largest stablecoins—tether, USD Coin and Binance USD—is about $100 billion, up from about $11 billion a year ago.

Jeremy Allaire,

chief executive of the USD Coin issuer, Circle Internet Financial Inc., said the meeting of the president’s working group is a good thing for stablecoins and that he supports developing clear standards. “I think it’s good news,” he said.

Tether Ltd., the issuer of the tether stablecoin, said it looked forward to working with officials to support transparency and compliance. Binance Holdings Ltd., issuer of Binance USD, said it sees the meeting as a positive move. Having regulators involved will bring more legitimacy and clarity to stablecoins, Binance Chief Compliance Officer Samuel Lim said.

Stablecoins and the companies that issue them have been criticized as not being trustworthy.

“There are many reasons to think that stablecoins—at least, many of the stablecoins—are not actually particularly stable,” Boston Federal Reserve President

Eric Rosengren

said in a June speech.

While the startups issuing these stablecoins including Circle and Tether are responsible for assets that make them sizable players in the traditional capital markets, there are no clear rules about how the assets should be regulated to ensure stability.

Share Your Thoughts

Do you think tether poses a potential financial stability risk? If so, what steps should regulators take? Join the conversation below.

In December, the president’s working group released a statement on the regulatory issues concerning stablecoins. Among other things, it suggested that best practices would include a 1:1 reserve ratio and said issuers should hold “high-quality, U.S.-dollar denominated assets” and hold them at U.S.-regulated entities.

Stablecoins operate on the assumption that their reserves are liquid and easily redeemable. Ostensibly, a stablecoin should at all times be redeemable for national currencies, and the amount held in reserve should equal the amount in circulation: currently $64 billion for Tether, $26 billion for USD Coin and $11 billion for Binance USD.

Stablecoin reserves, however, don’t just sit in bank accounts collecting interest. Circle and Tether manage the reserves to provide some level of income.

Neither Circle nor Tether provides a detailed breakdown of where their reserves are invested and the risks users of the tokens are taking. This lack of information has alarmed central bankers and lawmakers in the U.S. and overseas. Binance has said its stablecoin’s reserves are backed 1-1 by U.S. dollars held in custody by the New York-based crypto services company Paxos.

Both Circle and Tether have separately defended the level of information they share with the markets.

Stuart Hoegner,

general counsel at Tether, said the company has a highly liquid portfolio that has been stress-tested. He said the company has a risk-averse approach to managing its reserves and operates in a way to ensure that its dollar peg is maintained.

“Our transparency allows people to decide whether they are happy holding that token or not,” he said.


‘Bringing together regulators will enable us to assess the potential benefits of stablecoins while mitigating risks they could pose to users, markets, or the financial system.’


— Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen

What the companies have disclosed is that they have invested the reserves in corporate debt, commercial paper and other markets that are generally considered liquid, and in cash equivalents.

Tether, according to a report it released earlier this year, held about half of its reserves in commercial paper—short-term loans used by companies to cover expenses. The credit ratings of the commercial paper and whether it came from the U.S. or overseas couldn’t be determined.

In 2019, New York Attorney General Letitia James revealed as part of an investigation that executives of Tether, who also own and operate the exchange Bitfinex, took at least $700 million out of the tether reserve to shore up the balance sheet of Bitfinex.

The case was settled in February. As part of that settlement, Tether agreed to release quarterly reports on the composition of its reserves.

Regulators don’t have to look far for examples of what can go wrong in the world of finance. Money-market funds came under pressure last year during the pandemic-driven selloff and required support from the Fed. Dozens of money-market funds needed to be propped up during the 2008-09 financial crisis to prevent them from “breaking the buck,” or falling under their standard of a $1-a-share net asset value.

Building trust was one of the biggest reasons that Circle decided it would go public, according Mr. Allaire.

“It is about being a public company and being an open and transparent company,” he said in an interview earlier this month.

Write to Paul Vigna at paul.vigna@wsj.com

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