What is a stablecoin?

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that are designed to keep their value constant relative to another asset, such as the U.S. dollar. There are various approaches that can be used to accomplish this goal, we will discuss them more in depth later.

Why are they necessary?

Cryptocurrencies are volatile. The price of Bitcoin, and other cryptocurrencies are always changing, which makes them difficult to use as a medium of exchange. For instance, if a fund were using cryptocurrencies as a medium of exchange and had $100 million in total asset value on Monday, come Tuesday, they should expect to have the same amount of value. If they were using Ethereum, the value could be $90 million on Tuesday and $110 million on Wednesday. This amount of fluctuation is fine if cryptocurrency is being used as a speculative investment, but to use it as a medium of exchange would be difficult. Changes of million of dollars in a day’s time are not acceptable for storing this much value. Stablecoins attempt to solve this problem by pegging its value to some other asset in order for its value to remain constant.

Stablecoins provide the convenience and speed of using other cryptocurrencies without the volatility. One advantage of having a stable coin on the blockchain is that it allows users to move funds quickly. Instead of waiting days for the traditional banking system to move funds around, a stable coin can move the same funds in minutes. Stable coins also provide more liquidity to markets due to increased fund transfer speeds. Using a native blockchain token is advantageous to using a Venmo-style payment processor because of the limited trust required and increased transparency. Although moving large amounts of money is not Venmo’s use case, microtransactions using Venmo require more time and more trust than stablecoins. Paypal users have fees when using a debit or credit card and bank settlements take days. Stablecoins have some advantages over Paypal because they have lower fees and require much shorter transfer times. Another advantage is that users have control of their own money. Both Venmo and Paypal can restrict users from sending and receiving money, whereas no one can restrict users from using stablecoins.

Types of Stablecoins

There are three main types of stablecoins, two of which rely on an underlying asset for collateral, the third of which relies on market trust of the native asset due to it not being collateralized by another valuable asset.

Fiat Collateralized

These stablecoins are simple and straightforward. They rely on the issuer to keep a reserve of the underlying asset, they then create coins equivalent to the amount of the underlying asset they have.

Tether was the first company to attempt this feat and so far they have the largest market share by a wide margin. Many new, more transparent companies are begin created in an attempt to topple Tether’s monopoly.

For more information on Stably visit: medium.com/p/d18415f2c986

Cryptocurrency Collateralized

These stablecoins require more upkeep than fiat collateralized stablecoins. Essentially, these coins rely on a over collateralized pool of cryptocurrency to back their stablecoin. In order to account for volatility in the underlying asset, the pool of cryptocurrency is generally 50% or 100% larger in value than all outstanding coins.

Back in in 2014, Bitshares to created the coin bitUSD that would stay pegged to the U.S. dollars. Their coin is relatively stable in price, but still fluctuates. MakerDAO burst onto the scene in 2017 and has so far is over twice as large as bitUSD, using the Ethereum platform MakerDAO has become the largest crypto collateralized stablecoin and will most likely keep this title.

For more information on MakerDAO visit: medium.com/p/a45ae935bef2

Uncollateralized

These stablecoins rely on controlling the coin supply relative to demand in order to keep the value of the asset stable. Using basic supply and demand theory, these coins increase the supply when their value is too great, and reduce their supply when the value is too little, attempting to keep the price constant.

NuBits has been attempting to keep their coin pegged to the dollar for the last 4 years, but has broken parity multiple times. As of the writing of this article the price of 1 NuBit is $0.45 and the price does not look like it will recover any time soon. Most recently, Basis (previously Basecoin) raised $133 million in funding for their uncollateralized stablecoin project, and have released just a white-paper so far, their project is ambitious and it should be interesting to see where it ends up post-release.

For more information on Basis visit: medium.com/p/d7a6016a14f

Market Map of Stablecoins

Tradeoffs of Each System

Each of the three types of stablecoins require some trade offs, none of the three are perfect, but some tradeoffs are worse than others.

Centralized vs. Decentralized

All three models rely on differing degrees of centralization. Centralization of asset control can lead to instability if the central party does not behave in a just manner. For instance, a fiat collateralized token must be audited regularly to prevent them from making more coins than there are dollars in reserve.

Crypto collateralized stablecoins do not suffer from centralization because they rely on the consensus of users to operate, the same applies to uncollateralized stablecoins. Both crypto collateralized and uncollateralized stablecoins require an honest Oracle to provide the exchange rate of the coin. In order to regulate supply of the coin and create an accurate amount the Oracle must be honest. If the price of Basis is $1.00 on the market, but the users report the price to be $1.20 the software will create more Basis tokens in an attempt to fix the price discrepancy, however in this case it would drive the price below $1.00, breaking the peg to USD.

Some projects are attempting to create a decentralized Oracle, one that would not require trust, but these projects are still under development and only work in theory but not necessarily practice.

Efficiency vs. Inefficient Capital

The efficiency of the capital usage varies in each model. The efficiency depends on the amount of collateral required and the way in which this collateral is maintained. Fiat collateralized systems are very efficient because the amount of collateral is exactly equal to the value of the coins.

Crypto collateralized systems suffer from being overcollateralized. Due to the intense volatility of cryptocurrencies the collateral in these systems must account for that which causes them to be inefficient. If I wanted to be issued $5 worth of tokens I would need to put up $10 worth of collateral in Ether, this is not very useful for me unless I already have a lot of money to spare.

Uncollateralized systems are perfectly efficient because they require no collateral to be stored.

Collateralized vs. Uncollateralized

The usage of collateral gives the underlying coins inherent value because the coin is always redeemable for that collateral. Fiat collateralized systems have the strongest collateral because the strength of a national currency is greater than most other forms of collateral.

Crypto collateralized systems do have collateral, but the collateral is less stable than other forms of collateral, for this reason more collateral is required than there are coins issued. The use of the collateral is only as effective as the value of the collateral itself. Cryptocurrencies are highly speculative and volatile so their use in this system relies on the underlying assumption that they will continue to have value.

Uncollateralized systems have no collateral and therefore have no underlying asset to derive their value from. As mentioned above, the lack of collateral makes an uncollateralized coin have fragile stability, if the trust in the holders is gone the value of it can unwind quickly.

The Future of Stablecoins

There are inherent risks in every model of stable coin. The two most important features of a stable coin are the ability to keep funds safe and to stay constant in its price. The three discussed methods all have merits, but all carry some risk. Fiat-collateralized stablecoins require trust, crypto-collateralized tokens cannot handle large amounts of volatility and still require some trust, and uncollateralized tokens carry the risk of a price death spiral due to lost faith in the assets value.

It is likely that exchanges will continue to use centralized stable coins in the near future. Tether is the most pervasive stable coin, and large exchanges such as Binance, Bittrex, and Bitfinex continue to use it. For institutions and exchanges, the tradeoff of decentralization for price stability and legal guarantees is worth it. The market will decide which of the three ideas will be the most successful, but until the decentralized systems become more robust, users will turn to the more centralized methods, especially big market players.

Disclaimer: Do not take this article as investment advice, but rather for educational purposes. I am not a financial manager or professional asset manager. I am also helping the Stably team as a developer.

DISCLAIMER: This posting does not constitute legally binding disclosure as to Stably tokens. Stably intends to sell and purchase its tokens pursuant to terms of use only to KYC/AML/Sanction List-screened individuals in compliance with applicable laws. Stably tokens shall not be sold to or purchased from persons residing or located in the United States, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Burma (Myanmar), Liberia, Sudan, Syria, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Cote D’Ivoire, Congo, Somalia, Angola, Ethiopia, Yemen or North Korea and certain other jurisdictions.