Spreading Stablecoins

President Trump’s array of day-one executive orders included “Strengthening American Leadership in Digital Financial Technology” to support the use of digital assets. The order included a goal of “promoting and protecting the sovereignty of the United States dollar” through the development of dollar-backed stablecoins. Following on Trump’s pledge to provide a friendlier environment for digital assets, private sector interest and legislative proposals are moving to grow this sector.

Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies pegged to the value of another currency. Unlike the wild swings that can occur in the value of Bitcoin and its ilk, stablecoins have a fixed value relative to some other financial asset. To provide assurance of their worth, they are backed by safe and liquid assets like cash and Treasury bills. Any currency can be the basis of a stablecoin, but the two leaders in this category, USDC and USDT, are both linked to the U.S. dollar.

The coins are most commonly used to facilitate the purchase of other cryptocurrencies. When a dollar deposit is made to a crypto exchange, the value is shown as a dollar stablecoin, which can then be traded into other tokens. Stablecoins also have use for cross-border commerce and remittances. These blockchain-based dollars can be exchanged freely worldwide, then converted into local currency.

Stablecoins are an easy entry to a volatile asset class.

With a fixed value backed by financial instruments, stablecoins have similarities to conventional products like bank deposits and money market funds. Stablecoins are instantly tradable at all times, not bound to market hours. However, most stablecoins do not pay interest to their holders; the issuers make money from the yield on the underlying assets that support them. And stablecoins carry no deposit insurance, nor the full faith and credit of a government-issued security.