Lưu trữ cho từ khóa: stablecoins

What’s missing from MiCA’s comprehensive crypto manifesto? | Opinion

In April 2023, the European Union rolled out a comprehensive piece of legislation to finally reign in the crypto and blockchain industry. The Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) is a bold and pioneering initiative aimed at applying a unified regulatory framework to the industry and establishing clearer laws for crypto asset service providers and token issuers.

Viewed as a milestone in the crypto regulatory landscape, MiCA recently approved a provision to address stablecoins, which have long been seen as complicated assets to regulate due to their unclear classification and common use in cross-border transactions. Following the approved provision, Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, became the first stablecoin issuer to formally be recognized as compliant under the EU’s crypto legislation. 

Circle’s newly granted status has led many to ponder MiCA’s implications on the $160 billion aggregate stablecoin supply as well as the broader crypto and web3 economy.

While the idea behind the most thorough attempt to regulate crypto is to protect investors by placing liability on the organizations issuing digital assets and providing services, onboarding new users, and fostering innovation while ensuring competition, it will take some time to gauge its full impact. 

The idea for MiCA was born out of a wave of ICOs in 2017 and 2018 that raised concerns about scams, frauds, and other manipulations that could upend financial stability within the European bloc. After years of research, due diligence, and good intentions, MiCA deserves a lot of credit for its approach to balancing regulation with innovation—a clear recognition of crypto and blockchain’s technological and business advantages. Furthermore, MiCA bolsters stability, investor trust, transparency, and oversight with its comprehensive legal framework.

But MiCA has some blind spots. 

While the regulatory framework acknowledges the importance of bridging crypto asset service providers and traditional finance, it doesn’t offer much on how to make that a reality. Indeed, the growing overlap of tradfi and digital assets bodes well for boosting adoption and has likely contributed to a maturing crypto ecosystem, but MiCA places limitations on stablecoins that seem counterproductive. 

Non-Euro-pegged stablecoins are not allowed to be used in transactions for goods and services and face daily limitations on the number of transactions (up to one million) and their total value (€200 million). This essentially puts usage limits on USDC and USDT, the two leading stablecoins, even if they are certified as MiCA compliant.

And since stablecoins are so crucial for facilitating transactions, enabling defi, and boosting nearly every aspect of the industry, these curbs could potentially impact liquidity and disrupt innovation and defi activity, undermining a core pillar of MiCA’s mission. 

Moreover, these limitations are compounded because MiCA doesn’t emphasize interoperability, one of the industry’s most pressing needs, nor does it seem interested in encouraging crypto-fiat payment solutions—key avenues for bolstering liquidity and sparking innovation that stretch beyond crypto.

While it’s too early to understand how MiCA’s stablecoin approach will play out, Europe’s regulators can do more to address interoperability and cross-ecosystem payments to future-proof its economy and avoid market fragmentation. This can be improved by working with EU organizations like Horizon Europe and the European Innovation Council to find innovative startups that address areas MiCA has neglected.

For example, Kima, an asset-agnostic, peer-to-peer money transfer and payment protocol, provides an interoperable settlement layer for interchain and crypto-fiat transactions. By removing the barriers between blockchains and between traditional financial instruments and blockchain networks or decentralized apps, Kima’s protocol enables developers to access greater amounts of liquidity. This also benefits non-crypto native users and financial institutions by enabling funds to flow in all directions. 

MiCA will undoubtedly serve as the standard bearer for crypto regulation, guiding other nations and economic blocs on how to regulate a burgeoning, complex, and volatile market that offers a lot of promise. It’s important that in its just desire to protect its monetary interests, it doesn’t overlook other areas that impact the industry’s ability to grow. 

The EU has shown a willingness to adapt and study trends as they emerge, and in the fast-paced crypto world, this is needed to ensure appropriate measures are taken to protect investors as well as the integrity of the entire industry. 

Tổng hợp và chỉnh sửa: ThS Phạm Mạnh Cường
Theo Crypto News

Polymarket: Ethena’s USDe stablecoin will not lose its peg in 2024

Ethena’s (ENA) price has crashed by 61% from its all-time high and is nearing its record low as concerns about its stablecoin rise. 

ENA peaked at $1.13 in June and has dropped to $0.440, bringing its market cap from over $2 billion to $755 million. 

Ethena (ENA) price chart

Polymarket users expect Ethena USDe to maintain its peg

Meanwhile, Ethena’s USDe stablecoin has maintained its peg in the past few months as its assets jumped to over $3.39 billion. It has become the fourth-biggest stablecoin in the industry after Tether, USD Coin, and Dai.

Participants in Polymarket, the fast-growing betting platform, believe that the USDe token will not lose its peg this year. The probability of its collapse has dropped from 16% in June to just 5% this week.

This bet has attracted over $72,440 in predictions. If it crashes below 90 cents for 12 hours or more, it will resolve on December 31 this year or before that.

Polymarket has become a popular betting platform, and its users have made several accurate predictions. For example, users recently predicted that Joe Biden would avoid the general election. Polymarket’s base also predicted that spot Ethereum ETFs will start trading before July 26.

USDe offers an exciting 9.2% yield

The USDe stablecoin differs from Tether and USD Coin in that fiat currencies do not back it. Instead, it is an algorithmic stablecoin whose peg is maintained by spot crypto assets. 

Holders love it because of its substantial yield, which is 9.4%, higher than U.S. government and corporate bonds. 

It generates this yield by staking assets in Ethereum and by the funding and basis spread generated from derivative positions. Over 256,000 users hold the USDe token. 

USDe’s mechanics have led to comparisons with Terra USD, which promised huge returns but collapsed in 2022, costing investors over $40 billion. 

Many stablecoins have lost their pegs in the past. Terra USD, which was pegged at $1, has crashed to $0.019 while USDX lost its peg and was trading at $0.7953. 

USDe has grown recently through integration with multiple platforms. It recently integrated with Skroll, a native zero-knowledge EVM platform for Ethereum. This partnership means that Skroll users will benefit from faster transactions, lower fees, and better security features. 

Tổng hợp và chỉnh sửa: ThS Phạm Mạnh Cường
Theo Crypto News

Three reasons why the crypto market fell on Tuesday

An analyst cited by CryptoQuant theorized that a bottom was in play with the recent market-wide slump.

The total cryptocurrency market declined by more than 7% over the past week and more than 3% in a month. Notably, Bitcoin (BTC) dropped below the ,000 mark while altcoins suffered massive corrections. 

Altcoins, typically more volatile than Bitcoin, have fared worse than the top virtual currency and lost over 4% of of market value in the last 30 days. BTC has shed around 3% in the same timeframe, but the token seems locked in a sideways pattern. 

Miner Capitulation

A CryptoQuant report noted that miner capitulation was a major reason for the dip in the total market cap to .4 trillion. Following the Bitcoin halving, block rewards were slashed by 50%, and miner revenues fell 55% in tandem. 

The change in market dynamics has forced miners to finance business expenses by offloading more Bitcoin, contributing to additional selling pressure on the token’s price and bolstering its ranging price movement. 

Low stablecoin issuance

Stablecoins offer a pathway into digital assets by on-ramping and off-ramping liquidity for the decentralized ecosystem. Tokens like Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USD Coin (USDC) are pegged to the U.S. dollar, providing a non-volatile currency for trading. 

Frequent stablecoin issuance usually indicates an influx of capital and liquidity into the cryptocurrency market. However, analysts noted low stablecoin issuance levels. In other words, new capital flowing into digital assets has somewhat stalled with prices. 

Crypto ETF outflows 

Spot Bitcoin ETFs from firms like BlackRock and Fidelity broke Wall Street records by reaching multiple billions in assets within weeks. Recently, however, the funds have seen outflows, adding more pressure to Bitcoin prices and the broader digital asset market. More than 0 million exited digital asset investment products last week after a hawkish Federal Reserve policy meeting.

Although the market has lulled, analysts opined that a reversal is not out of bounds in the short term. “Historical trends suggest that periods of sustained low miner revenues combined with a high hash rate can indicate a potential market bottom,” said a report. 

Tổng hợp và chỉnh sửa: ThS Phạm Mạnh Cường
Theo Crypto News