Stablecoins and Synthetic Assets

Lecture 22: Stablecoins and
Synthetic Assets
Cryptocurrencies
Decentralized, global transparency, programmability
Functions of money
Medium-of-Exchange, Store-of-Value, Unit-of-Account
Price volatility
BTC / USD
Stablecoins
Price is pegged to another stable asset
Fiat currencies – relatively “stable”
Inflation
Tether / USD
Price Stabilization Mechanisms
CBDC: centralized fiat-equivalent digital currencies
Collateralized stablecoin: use fiat, commodity, crypto as collaterals
Non-collateralized stablecoin: algorithmic peg
Price Stabilization Mechanisms
Collateralized
Non-collateralized
Stablecoins
CBDC
Fiat-backed
Crypto-backed
E-CNY
Tether
DAI
Algorithmic
Basis
Digital currencies
Decentralized
Diem
E-Krona
AMPL
C
entral
 
B
ank
 
D
igital
 
C
urrencies
Price
 
pegged to the value of that country's fiat currency
I
ssued and regulated by a nation's monetary authority
May
 
not
 
need
 
blockchains
Fiat-collateralized Stablecoin
Uses fiat money as collateral
Example: Tether
Simple, 1-to-1 USD-Tether exchange
A centralized custodian to manage collateral and issue new stablecoins
Crypto-collateralized Stablecoin
Uses different assets as collateral
Example: MakerDAO
Deposit ETH to open collateralized dept positions (CDPs)
Mint DAI tokens
Return DAI tokens to unlock ETH
Over-collateralized problem
Non-collateralized Stablecoins
Algorithmic
 
supply
 
adjustment
When price > $1, increase supply
When price < $1, decrease supply
Non-collateralized Stablecoins
Protocol layer
Variable mining rewards: When price > $1, increase mining rate (by increasing
mining rewards)
Lock-in mining: control mining rate when price < $1
Example: UST (Terra USD). Third most popular stable coin after USDC and
USDT
Application layer
Seigniorage Share: adjust supply through shares
Synthetic Assets
D
igital representations of derivatives
Cryptocurrency: WBTC, WETH
Stock: Apple, TSLA
Commodity: gas, gold
Index:
 
ETF
Synthetic Assets
Price is pegged to another asset
WBTC / USD
WBTC / BTC
Example: Mirror Protocol
DeFi protocol on the Terra network
Roles
Minter: generate synthetic assets (called mAssets) as CDPs (collateralized debt
positions)
Trader: buy and sell mAssets
Liquidity provider: provide mAssets and TerraUSD to TerraSwap
Staker: stake liquidity tokens or MIR tokens
Example: Mirror Protocol
Mint: deposit TerraUSD or mAssets to mint new mAssets
Open collateralized debt positions (CDPs) for minting
Maintain minimum collateral ratio (MCR)
Minting price is pegged to Oracle
Burn: burn mAssets to get collateral returned
Trade: similar to Uniswap
Trading price is determined by reserve ratio
Liquidation
As the price of an asset rises, minted 
mAssets
 may fall below the MCR
and trigger a liquidation event
When that happens, the Mirror protocol will automatically sell
collateral to buy 
mAssets
 until the collateral ratio reaches the MCR
again
This buying pressure created for 
mAssets
 will drive prices higher and
will help the price of 
mAssets
 converge with the price on the global
markets
Liquidation
When the minted asset’s price rises and
the collateral ratio falls below the
minimum collateral ratio, the protocol
will sell collateral to buy back shares of
the minted asset to burn.
Example: Synthetix
Use governance tokens SNX as collateral
Mint: deposit SNX to mint sUSD
Trade: usd sUSD to buy synthetic assets (called synths)
Burn: repay synths to get SNX back
Synthetix: Infinite Liquidity
Pools are not needed for exchanges
Convert
 
from
 
one
 
synth
 
to
 
another
 
according
 
to
 
price
 
oracles
U
p to the total amount of collateral
Zero
 
slippage
Other
 
Protocols
Universal Market Access
 
(UMA)
Lock
 
collaterals
 
to
 
mint
 
long
 
/
 
short
 
tokens
Sell
 
long
 
/
 
short
 
tokens
 
to
 
take
 
long
 
/
 
short
 
positions
dYdX:
 
p
erpetual 
c
ontract 
m
arkets
Perp
etual
 
allow
s
 for exposure to arbitrary liquid assets
Partially
 
decentralized
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Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies designed to minimize price volatility by pegging their value to another stable asset like fiat currency. They provide stability and are used in various price stabilization mechanisms. Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), fiat-collateralized stablecoins, crypto-collateralized stablecoins, and non-collateralized stablecoins are key components in the realm of stablecoins and synthetic assets. Each type has its unique characteristics and functions within the digital currency ecosystem.

  • Stablecoins
  • Crypto-assets
  • Price Stability
  • Digital Currencies
  • Decentralization

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  1. Lecture 22: Stablecoins and Synthetic Assets

  2. Cryptocurrencies Decentralized, global transparency, programmability Functions of money Medium-of-Exchange, Store-of-Value, Unit-of-Account Price volatility BTC / USD

  3. Stablecoins Price is pegged to another stable asset Fiat currencies relatively stable Inflation Tether / USD

  4. Price Stabilization Mechanisms CBDC: centralized fiat-equivalent digital currencies Collateralized stablecoin: use fiat, commodity, crypto as collaterals Non-collateralized stablecoin: algorithmic peg

  5. Price Stabilization Mechanisms Digital currencies Stablecoins Collateralized Non-collateralized CBDC Crypto-backed Algorithmic Fiat-backed Tether AMPL E-CNY Basis Diem E-Krona DAI Decentralized

  6. Central Bank Digital Currencies Price pegged to the value of that country's fiat currency Issued and regulated by a nation's monetary authority May not need blockchains

  7. Fiat-collateralized Stablecoin Uses fiat money as collateral Example: Tether Simple, 1-to-1 USD-Tether exchange A centralized custodian to manage collateral and issue new stablecoins

  8. Crypto-collateralized Stablecoin Uses different assets as collateral Example: MakerDAO Deposit ETH to open collateralized dept positions (CDPs) Mint DAI tokens Return DAI tokens to unlock ETH Over-collateralized problem

  9. Non-collateralized Stablecoins Algorithmic supply adjustment When price > $1, increase supply When price < $1, decrease supply

  10. Non-collateralized Stablecoins Protocol layer Variable mining rewards: When price > $1, increase mining rate (by increasing mining rewards) Lock-in mining: control mining rate when price < $1 Example: UST (Terra USD). Third most popular stable coin after USDC and USDT Application layer Seigniorage Share: adjust supply through shares

  11. Synthetic Assets Digital representations of derivatives Cryptocurrency: WBTC, WETH Stock: Apple, TSLA Commodity: gas, gold Index: ETF

  12. Synthetic Assets Price is pegged to another asset WBTC / BTC WBTC / USD

  13. Example: Mirror Protocol DeFi protocol on the Terra network Roles Minter: generate synthetic assets (called mAssets) as CDPs (collateralized debt positions) Trader: buy and sell mAssets Liquidity provider: provide mAssets and TerraUSD to TerraSwap Staker: stake liquidity tokens or MIR tokens

  14. Example: Mirror Protocol Mint: deposit TerraUSD or mAssets to mint new mAssets Open collateralized debt positions (CDPs) for minting Maintain minimum collateral ratio (MCR) Minting price is pegged to Oracle Burn: burn mAssets to get collateral returned Trade: similar to Uniswap Trading price is determined by reserve ratio

  15. Liquidation As the price of an asset rises, minted mAssets may fall below the MCR and trigger a liquidation event When that happens, the Mirror protocol will automatically sell collateral to buy mAssets until the collateral ratio reaches the MCR again This buying pressure created for mAssets will drive prices higher and will help the price of mAssets converge with the price on the global markets

  16. Liquidation When the minted asset s price rises and the collateral ratio falls below the minimum collateral ratio, the protocol will sell collateral to buy back shares of the minted asset to burn.

  17. Example: Synthetix Use governance tokens SNX as collateral Mint: deposit SNX to mint sUSD Trade: usd sUSD to buy synthetic assets (called synths) Burn: repay synths to get SNX back

  18. Synthetix: Infinite Liquidity Pools are not needed for exchanges Convert from one synth to another according to price oracles Up to the total amount of collateral Zero slippage

  19. Other Protocols Universal Market Access (UMA) Lock collaterals to mint long / short tokens Sell long / short tokens to take long / short positions dYdX: perpetual contract markets Perpetual allows for exposure to arbitrary liquid assets Partially decentralized

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