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The
search for the 'Holy Grail' of cryptocurrencies -
22nd February 2018



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Tether,
which claims to be pegged one-to-one to the dollar,
is the most prominent among so-called stable coins.
Photo: Bloomberg
It's
the Holy Grail of cryptocurrencies - an asset with
all the benefits of decentralisation but none of the
volatility.
Tether,
which claims to be pegged one-to-one to the dollar,
is the most prominent among so-called stable coins.
It's also the most controversial, with US regulators
and investors trying to sort out whether it's a scam.
Even with Tether under a cloud, demand is rising for
tokens seeking to dull price swings and increase the
use of virtual money.
"Stable
coins are potentially the key to unlocking widespread
adoption of cryptos," said Rafael Cosman, the
24-year-old co-founder of San Francisco-based TrustToken,
which issued a token named TrueUSD last month.
Their
creators say stable coins can be used by merchants
to price goods, send remittances abroad and serve
as a reliable store of wealth. They can also act as
a haven from the wild price swings that often accompany
Bitcoin and other popular tokens.
Tether
has become a popular substitute for dollars on crypto
exchanges worldwide, with about $US2.2 billion ($2.8
billion) of the tokens outstanding. While Tether has
said all of its coins are backed by dollars held in
reserve, the company has yet to provide conclusive
evidence or have its accounts audited. The US Commodity
Futures Trading Commission sent subpoenas on December
6 to Tether and related virtual-currency exchange
Bitfinex, Bloomberg News reported.
NuBits,
launched in 2014 by what's known as a decentralised
autonomous organisation, also said its coins are pegged
at one-to-one with the dollar and are meant to be
redeemable, though the platform doesn't guarantee
the coins are fully backed. Instead, the funds are
stored in a "trustless liquidity pool,"
a blockchain-based system that claims to not rely
on third parties, in which users are in control of
their own funds.
NuBits
mints new coins to respond to demand from users, if
current users vote to do so. The network controls
the supply of coins in circulation to maintain price
stability, and has mostly been able to maintain the
price at $US1 since its inception, according to CoinMarketCap.
Maker's
Dai coins, which are pegged to the dollar, also depend
on an automatic mechanism that controls supply and
demand. Coins are backed by each user's own Ethereum-based
digital assets, which are held as collateral in so-called
smart contracts. Dai coins were listed in December
and have been able to roughly maintain the peg.
Tokens
issued by Maker have soared by almost five times this
year to about $US15 million, and those issued by NuBits
soared by 14 times to almost $US14 million, according
to CoinMarketCap. That compares with bitcoin's market
cap of about $US200 billion. The coins' trading volume
also increased almost seven-fold, though at a high
of 1.3 per cent of total volume, according to Brave
New Coin, the sector is still a speck in the cryptocurrency
market.
'It's
an illusion'
Critics
of stable coins say decentraliSed currencies and stable
prices simply don't mesh, as the process needs to
be centralized at at least one stage. The projects
will need to rely on banks to hold funds, auditors
for verification and centralized price feeds, said
Tone Vays, a New York-based analyst known for his
skepticism of most cryptocurrencies other than bitcoin.
"They
will only function under an initial set of assumptions
and if that's not properly calculated, and it can't
be because reality isn't a test lab, the only way
to fix it in the future is by having full control
of the project," said Vays.
"It's
an illusion."
Even
so, the pipeline of stable coins is growing. Some
propose to back their coins one-to-one with an asset,
fiat currency or a basket of those assets kept on
reserve. Instead of a traditional currency, other
coins would be pegged to cryptocurrencies. In a third
type, an algorithm automatically controls the supply
of coins so that the price doesn't fluctuate relative
to the peg.
"More
people coming into crypto want to hedge into something
less volatile, especially when the market is falling,"
said Fran Strajnar, head of cryptocurrency technical
analysis firm Brave New Coin.
"Stable
coins are set to climb the ladder as some of the most
in-demand crypto assets as the industry matures and
more institutional participants enter the marketplace."
TrueCoin,
whose tokens haven't been listed yet, is a dollar-backed
model, like Tether, but they make it clear they don't
have much else in common with their biggest rival,
with a section in their website dedicated to answer
the question "How is TrueCoin different from
Tether?"
While
Tether is responsible for its reserve funds, TrueCoin
keeps funds in custodial accounts only investors can
access. Investors are also legally entitled to redeem
TrueUSD tokens for dollars kept in their custodial
accounts, which will be audited by third parties.
The team aims to have accounts with multiple banking
partners. Alliance Trust Co. of Nevada is one of their
partners and they are in talks with others, Cosman
said. Tether had declined to name which banks are
holding its funds.
"We're
learning from other projects to try to be the best
coin that we can be. Tether has done several things
well, and they have maintained a stable price, but
they've broken trust and that's hard to repair,"
Cosman said.
Still
in progress is Basecoin, which is backed by some of
the most well-recognized cryptocurrency investors,
including Andreessen Horowitz, Polychain Capital,
Pantera Capital and MetaStable Capital. Basecoin wants
to peg its coin to an exchange rate or basket of goods
which will be automatically uploaded to the blockchain,
either from a single feed of prices, from the median
price of many feeds, or from the price agreed in a
decentralised voting system. The Basecoin protocol
will then expand or contract the coin supply with
algorithm to keep the price peg.
Waiting
for the tide to change
The
first attempt to create a stable cryptocurrency dates
back to at least 2014, with BitShares. Like most stable
coins after it, it tried to back its coins with assets
but the peg hasn't worked well enough to curb price
movements.
The
non-crypto world has plenty of examples where pegged
currencies don't work, such as Argentina, Zimbabwe
and Switzerland, where economies that were too fundamentally
strong or weak relative to the peg caused the system
to unravel.
Of
course, cryptocurrencies work differently, but just
like national economies, all it takes is the loss
of trust for the currencies to collapse.
"These
stability coins have found their natural base in the
ecosystem mainly from the trust that you get cash
in exchange for cryptos," said Charles Hayter,
head of research firm CryptoCompare. "The risk
is if the tide goes the other way and you lose that
trust. All you need is for the tide to change."
(The
Washington Post)

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