Web3 Stablecoins Deep Dive

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies designed to maintain a fixed value — almost always pegged to the US Dollar. They combine the speed and programmability of crypto with the predictability of traditional money. They are the most used asset in all of DeFi, yet also one of the most misunderstood in terms of risk.

Why Stablecoins Exist

Crypto is volatile. Bitcoin can drop 30% in a week. ETH can double in a month. This volatility makes most cryptocurrencies impractical for everyday payments, savings, or DeFi strategies where you need a predictable value.

  WITHOUT STABLECOINS:
  You earn 100 ETH in DeFi
  ETH drops 40% before you can sell
  Your real earnings: 60 ETH worth of value

  WITH STABLECOINS:
  You earn yield in USDC
  USDC stays at $1.00 regardless of market
  Your earnings are preserved

The Three Types of Stablecoins

Type 1 — Fiat-Backed (Centralized)

A company holds real dollars (or equivalent assets) in a bank account. For every stablecoin in circulation, one dollar sits in reserve. You trust the company to hold the reserves honestly and allow redemption at any time.

  [User deposits $1,000] → Company mints 1,000 USDC
  [User returns 1,000 USDC] → Company sends $1,000 back
  
  Reserve: $1,000 cash in bank
  Supply:  1,000 USDC on blockchain
  
  Always balanced 1:1 (if company is honest)
Examples and Issuers
  • USDC — issued by Circle. Monthly audited reserves. Widely used in DeFi and payments.
  • USDT (Tether) — largest by market cap. Historically less transparent about reserves but widely accepted.
  • BUSD — issued by Binance with Paxos. Regulated in New York.
Risks
  • Counterparty risk: If the company is fraudulent or goes bankrupt, reserves may not exist
  • Regulatory risk: Governments can freeze accounts or order redemption halts (Circle froze USDC in Tornado Cash wallets in 2022)
  • Censorship: Issuers can blacklist wallet addresses

Type 2 — Crypto-Backed (Decentralized)

Instead of a company holding dollars, users lock cryptocurrency as collateral in a smart contract. The stablecoin is issued against that collateral. Because crypto is volatile, these stablecoins are over-collateralized — you must deposit more value than you borrow.

  EXAMPLE — DAI (MakerDAO):

  You deposit $1,500 worth of ETH into a smart contract
                    ↓
  Smart contract mints 1,000 DAI (worth $1,000)
  (150% collateral ratio — $1,500 deposited for $1,000 borrowed)
                    ↓
  ETH price rises → Your collateral ratio improves (safer)
  ETH price falls → If ratio drops below minimum:
                    Smart contract LIQUIDATES your ETH
                    to repay the DAI — automatically
How the Peg Is Maintained

If DAI trades above $1, arbitrageurs create more DAI (mint it cheaply, sell at premium). If DAI trades below $1, they buy it cheap and repay loans at a discount. Market incentives push it back toward $1 constantly.

Examples
  • DAI — the original decentralized stablecoin by MakerDAO
  • LUSD — by Liquity protocol, ETH-only collateral, highly decentralized
  • crvUSD — by Curve Finance, uses lending markets as collateral
Risks
  • Liquidation risk: A sudden collateral price crash can trigger mass liquidations
  • Smart contract risk: Bugs in the contract can drain the system
  • Oracle risk: If price feeds are manipulated, the system mints or liquidates incorrectly

Type 3 — Algorithmic (Uncollateralized)

These stablecoins use code and market incentives — not reserves or collateral — to maintain their peg. A secondary token absorbs price volatility and keeps the stablecoin at $1 through an automated mint-and-burn mechanism.

  ALGORITHMIC DESIGN (simplified):

  StableCoin price above $1:
  → System mints more StableCoin → Supply increases → Price falls back to $1

  StableCoin price below $1:
  → Users burn StableCoin for secondary token → Supply decreases → Price rises back to $1
  
  Relies entirely on continued demand and trust in the mechanism
The UST / Terra Collapse — A Critical Lesson

In May 2022, TerraUSD (UST) — once the third largest stablecoin at $18 billion market cap — lost its peg and collapsed to near zero in 72 hours. Its sister token LUNA went from $80 to fractions of a cent. Billions in savings were wiped out.

  UST DE-PEG SPIRAL:

  UST drops slightly below $1
          ↓
  Users panic and sell UST
          ↓
  System mints massive amounts of LUNA to absorb selling
          ↓
  LUNA supply hyperinflates → LUNA price collapses
          ↓
  No mechanism left to restore UST peg
          ↓
  Both UST and LUNA collapse to near zero

This event taught the entire industry that algorithmic stablecoins without real collateral backing can enter a death spiral under selling pressure.

Current Algorithmic Projects

Most pure algorithmic stablecoins have failed or been abandoned post-Terra. Hybrid models (partially collateralized + algorithmic) like FRAX attempt to reduce risk, but remain more volatile than fully backed alternatives.

Comparing All Three Types

FeatureFiat-BackedCrypto-BackedAlgorithmic
Peg stabilityVery highHigh (if collateral holds)Low to moderate
DecentralizationNone (centralized)HighHigh
Censorship resistanceNone (can blacklist)HighHigh
Collateral requiredUSD in bankCrypto overcollateralNone
Collapse riskLow (regulatory/fraud)Moderate (liquidation)High (death spiral)
Best exampleUSDCDAIUST (failed)

What Is a De-Peg?

A de-peg occurs when a stablecoin's price moves meaningfully away from its $1 target. Even USDC briefly de-pegged to $0.87 in March 2023 when Silicon Valley Bank — which held part of Circle's reserves — collapsed. It recovered within days once the US government guaranteed deposits.

No stablecoin is 100% risk-free. The risks are different, not absent.

Where Stablecoins Are Used

DeFi Liquidity

Stablecoin pairs (USDC/ETH, DAI/USDC) form the backbone of DEX liquidity pools. Providing stablecoin liquidity earns fees with minimal impermanent loss compared to volatile pairs.

Lending and Borrowing

Users borrow stablecoins against their crypto collateral to access liquidity without selling their holdings. They repay the stablecoin loan to reclaim their collateral later.

Cross-Border Payments

Sending USDC internationally settles in seconds and costs cents. Traditional wire transfers take days and cost $20–$50. This is one of the most concrete real-world applications of crypto today.

Savings in High-Inflation Regions

In countries with rapidly devaluing currencies, holding USDC preserves dollar-equivalent value — accessible to anyone with a smartphone and an internet connection.

Stable Yield

DeFi protocols pay interest on stablecoin deposits — funded by borrowers paying interest on loans. This creates predictable yield without exposure to token price volatility.

Key Questions Before Using Any Stablecoin

  • Who backs it — a regulated company, a smart contract, or just code?
  • Are reserves audited and publicly verifiable?
  • Can the issuer blacklist or freeze your wallet?
  • What happens to your holdings if the collateral drops sharply?
  • Has this stablecoin maintained its peg through past market stress events?

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