Digital Asset Market Note: A “De-pegging” Soros Would Be Proud Of

This week has seen a series of rapid contractions across the digital asset ecosystem. In a space that is well-known for volatility, even this week has stood out to observers. To navigate effectively, investors must understand the broader investment context in which these events have transpired, the trigger for the sharp sell-off and how this is part of the evolutionary process that could propel the digital asset ecosystem forward—though also backward at times.

Since January 2022, the broader market sentiment has been “risk-off.” After an unprecedented run-up to all-time highs for the digital asset ecosystem, which reached more than US$3 trillion in market capitalization in November 20211, a series of external factors took hold. The first was the flagging of tighter monetary policy in major economies, particularly the United States, over the course of 2022. The second was the outbreak of conflict between Ukraine and the Russian Federation, which has caused volatility in commodity markets and further stoked already-elevated inflation. Finally, portfolio managers face a 60/40 equity and bond portfolio that has found its limits, as broader equity markets have contracted at the same time that bond market yields have been falling. The NASDAQ, broadly, and non-profit-making technology stocks, in particular, have seen steep sell-offs during 2022. This is the backdrop against which a series of events transpired over the past week.

The impetus for the most recent sell-off in the digital asset space was the “de-pegging” of the ironically termed “stablecoin” associated with the Terra blockchain, called UST, and the related LUNA cryptocurrency.

Not All Stablecoins Are Created the Same – or Equally Stable

Not all stablecoins are the same—the term is commonly applied in too broad a fashion. Some stablecoins are collateralized and managed by a regulated, centralized corporation (e.g., Circle’s USDC). Some are over-collateralized but managed algorithmically (e.g., Maker’s DAI). Then there is Tether, which is centrally managed and mostly backed by not-yet-fully-disclosed commercial paper.

Figure 1: Market Share of Stablecoins May 2021 to May 2022 in USD

(see https://www.theblockcrypto.com/data/decentralized-finance/stablecoins)

The UST stablecoin is designed to maintain a peg of US$1. It does this using an algorithm linked to Terra’s native cryptocurrency, called LUNA, which fluctuates depending on the value of UST. Put succinctly: