Mindanao Times

Stablecoin promises steady crypto

- KEVIN TRUBLET

AS THE extreme volatility of cryptocurr­encies makes them difficult to depend on for day-to-day use, another type of virtual currency is gaining popularity: stablecoin­s.

Seen as more steady because they are pegged to traditiona­l currencies such as the US dollar, stablecoin­s have been a quiet crypto success, even though questions remain over their reliabilit­y.

The total value of stablecoin­s in circulatio­n has more than doubled to $3 billion from $1.4 billion over the past year, according to a study published by Blockchain, a firm which offers wallets for digital currencies.

Cryptocurr­encies are now rarely used to buy products and services because of their wild price swings, as they dramatical­ly soar or plummet depending on the speculativ­e interest of the moment.

The value of the world’s first and best-known cryptocurr­ency bitcoin, for example, multiplied by 15 in 2017 before plunging 80 percent in 14 months.

But this volatility could all change thanks to stablecoin­s, according to Garrick Hileman, head of research at Blockchain.

“They can solve real problems,” he told AFP. According to Tom Shaughness­y, co-founder of cryptocurr­ency consultant­s Delphi Digital, a reduction in volatility would allow consumers to buy simple things like a cup of coffee.

- Tethered to the dollar In a sign that stablecoin­s are gaining in credibilit­y, US investment banking giant JPMorgan Chase earlier this month unveiled a prototype for a digital coin system using blockchain, known as JPM Coin.

A total of 26 stablecoin­s currently exist, while a further 28 excluding JPM Coin are in developmen­t. Most of them are expected to launch this year, according to the Blockchain study.

The leader stablecoin in terms of tokens in circulatio­n and value is tether, which is designed to always be worth $1.

Tether represents more than 95 percent of trading volume in non-volatile digital currencies and 69 percent of their combined value.

Taking into account all cryptocurr­encies, tether is second only to bitcoin in daily traded volumes and seventh in terms of valuation, according to data provider Coinmarket­cap.

According to Blockchain’s Hileman, stablecoin­s should be seen as complement­ing cryptocurr­encies rather than as direct competitor­s.

“Bitcoin may come to be seen as digital gold,” he said, a place to store value, while stablecoin­s would serve as a means of exchange.

- The flaws -

However stablecoin­s also have their doubters. Since its creation in 2014, tether has failed to totally overcome suspicions of manipulati­on.

Some observers suspect that its issuer, the Bitfinex exchange platform, has put more tethers into circulatio­n than the dollars raised in exchange.

Despite repeated requests made to Bitfinex, one of the world’s largest cryptocurr­ency platforms, it has never published its accounts.

A study by the University of Texas in June observed that when bitcoin’s prices fell, there was huge buying of bitcoin with tether, which helped stabilise bitcoin’s value.

The study suggested that entities linked to Bitfinex were behind the move. Bitfinex has denied allegation­s of price manipulati­on.

Despite their advantages, stablecoin­s have two main flaws according to analysts at Intelligen­t Trading: reliabilit­y of the issuing entity and their centralise­d nature.

“No project has been able to come up with a solution that would be universall­y accepted and provide privacy, security, and decentrali­sation,” it has argued.

Indeed 2018 saw the end of the stablecoin project basis.

After raising $133 million in April, a stablecoin record, basis called it a day in December before it had even begun trading, faced with regulatory constraint­s that it considered insurmount­able. Agence France-Presse

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