Stablecoins are tokens that are designed to keep their price parity with another asset. For example, a token pegged to the US Dollar at a 1:1 ratio should always be interchanged for the same amount in USD Dollars.
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In the crypto, the main advantage of stablecoins is the reduction of price volatility that is typical associated with crypto-currencies (e.g. Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.). Keeping the price stable is especially important when establishing contracts that pay for services or/and goods at a future date. It is also important to be able to accurately perform accounting, budgeting, and paying taxes in a predictable manner.
Other advantages can include a combination of:
- censorship resistance;
- enabling truly decentralized financial applications;
- reduce corruption, issuance risks, fraud, etc.;
- faster to transfers and/or settlements than other standard currencies;
- pseudo-anonymity could provide privacy that may be advantageous for certain legal activities.
There are also potential disadvantages or trade-offs, such as:
- used to finance detrimental, or illegal, activities;
- not being officially recognized (e.g., unable to pay taxes, etc.);
- technical and operational risks (e.g., losing private keys, hacks, contract bugs, etc.);
- pseudo-anonymity could be compromised and allow others to associate certain transactions with a user resulting breach of privacy.
Stablecoins can be classified into three different types:
- Fiat-backed stablecoins involve an issuer (e.g., Circle Financial, Tether Inc., Paxos Trust) tokenizing an asset they have in custody. New tokens are issued/minted when this asset is deposited and destroyed/burned when these tokens are redeemed. They have the risk of centralization, as well as risks involved with banking rules and other regulations. Notable examples include USDT and USDC.
- Non-fiat collateralized stablecoins tend to be backed by over-collateralized crypto assets and are issued/burned when a user deposits/withdraws the asset backing it. There is the risk of the underlying asset losing enough value that the collateral is not enough to sustain the peg. A good example includes DAI from MakerDAO.
- Algorithmic stablecoins use on-chain incentives to maintain a certain stable value. The risks of these types of tokens are associated with their mechanism design and incentives. These are also prone to attacks associated with being on-chain. Notable examples included USD Terra.
There are other types of stablecoin that combine a number of the features previously described. For example, FRAX uses a combination of 2 and 3 to create a stablecoin partially backed by collateral and stabilized algorithmically.