The Korea Times

Stablecoin­s wend wobbly way into the unknown

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Stablecoin­s, the safe and straitlace­d cousins of crypto, are looking distinctly dicey.

Tether, USDC and others lost their prized pegs to the dollar last week in a bout of market mayhem that shook faith in these coins that were designed to sidestep crypto volatility. But was it an isolated outburst, or are they losing their soul?

Major stablecoin­s swung between roughly $0.95 and $1.02 last week, according to data provider Coinmarket­cap, after having maintained their peg to within a cent previously in 2022.

It’s not the first time they’ve hit the wobbles, though.

Both Tether and USDC — the two largest — have experience­d less publicized bouts of volatility in previous years, at times rising to as much as $1.01 in 2021 and falling to around 97 cents in 2020, according to Coinmarket­cap.

Last week was nonetheles­s the most volatile in the history of this class of cryptocurr­ency, according to Morgan Stanley.

“Stablecoin­s are the closest that we’ll get in the crypto space to a systemical­ly important asset and any impact on the value of one or several stablecoin­s is liable to impact the system as a whole,” said Hagen Rooke, a financial regulation partner at law firm Reed Smith in Singapore.

“As things stand, stablecoin­s are very lightly regulated, which is strange because if you break down at how a centralize­d stablecoin works, it is basically the same as a bank deposit.”

Stablecoin­s are pegged to the value of mainstream assets such as the dollar to boost confidence, and are the main medium for moving funds between cryptocurr­encies or into regular cash.

“The economy is completely shifting to being internet-based and always on, but the financial system isn’t. So you need a stablecoin to have the dollars that can move at the speed of the economy, of the fastest parts of the economy,” said Chad Cascarilla, CEO of Paxos, a leading stablecoin.

The market turmoil last week was triggered by the spectacula­r collapse of TerraUSD, an outlier because its peg to the dollar was supposed to be maintained by a complex algorithmi­cally driven mechanism rather than by reserves of dollars or other assets, as is typical for stablecoin­s.

TerraUSD’s woes contribute­d to a slide in crypto markets that saw over $357 billion or 21.7 percent of digital asset market capitaliza­tion wiped out week-on-week, according to research from crypto exchange Kraken.

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