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Stablecoins: Why the Crypto That Never Rises Is the Most Useful One

Stablecoins: Why the Crypto That Never Rises Is the Most Useful One

July 5, 2026
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Whenever I tell someone I work in crypto, the same question eventually comes: 'But what if it all crashes?' The answer usually starts with 'there's a thing called a stablecoin.' It's arguably the most practical invention in crypto — and probably the least understood. Here's how stablecoins came to be, how they work, and why one of them disappeared in 72 hours, taking $40 billion with it.

Why Would Anyone Want Crypto That Doesn't Go Up?

The core problem with Bitcoin and most other cryptocurrencies is volatility. The price can drop 20% in a single day. Great for speculation, terrible for everything else: payments, savings, sending money. A stablecoin solves exactly that: one token = $1, always. It's cryptocurrency pegged to a stable asset — most commonly the US dollar.

Stablecoins live on a blockchain — meaning they can be transferred anywhere in the world in seconds for near-zero fees (especially on Layer 2). But the price doesn't move. Today, the combined market cap of all stablecoins exceeds $170 billion, per CoinMarketCap. That's larger than the GDP of many countries.

A History in Dates

▸ 2014 — Tether (USDT): the first one

Tether launched USDT with a simple premise: every token is backed by a real dollar held in reserve. Deposit a dollar, get a USDT. Burn a USDT, get the dollar back. It quickly became the trading currency of every exchange: traders could lock in profits without wiring funds to a bank, keeping everything in-wallet and ready to redeploy.

▸ 2018 — USDC: transparency as a competitive advantage

Circle launched USDC with a differentiator: monthly independent audits. Every dollar of backing is held only in cash and short-term US Treasuries. No commercial paper, no promissory notes. For businesses and DeFi protocols, that clarity turned out to matter more than a slightly larger liquidity pool.

▸ 2020 — DeFi summer: stablecoins become the fuel

The explosion of DeFi — decentralized finance — turned stablecoins into core infrastructure. They flow into liquidity pools, get lent through smart contracts, and generate 5–20% annual yields with no bank involved. When you hear about yield farming, it almost always means stablecoins at the center of it.

▸ May 2022 — UST/Luna: $40 billion in 72 hours

This is the most important stablecoin story ever told — and the most instructive. The Terra project built an algorithmic stablecoin called UST: no dollar reserves, just an algorithm and a 'burn LUNA to mint UST' mechanism. At its peak, UST had an $18B market cap, LUNA $40B. It seemed to work. CoinDesk has the full timeline of the collapse.

On May 9, 2022, someone dumped a large block of UST into the market. The peg slipped slightly — $0.99 instead of $1. The algorithm minted more LUNA to restore the price. LUNA fell. UST holders panicked and sold. UST fell further. More LUNA was minted. Within 72 hours, LUNA was worth $0.0001 and UST $0.10. Tens of thousands of people lost their savings. The algorithm didn't break any rules — it just couldn't beat them.

"An algorithmic stablecoin without real backing is like a bank with no money — only a promise that it will have money if everyone keeps believing it will." — a comparison now repeated across the entire industry.

▸ March 2023 — USDC at $0.87: even 'safe' ones carry risk

When Silicon Valley Bank collapsed, it emerged that Circle held $3.3 billion of USDC's reserves there. Over the weekend, USDC fell to $0.87 — a 13% depeg. The US government ultimately guaranteed deposits, and USDC returned to $1.00 by Monday. But the lesson was delivered: even a 'fully backed' stablecoin carries counterparty risk.

Three Models: How the Peg Actually Works

Fiat-backed (USDT, USDC). Each token = $1 in a reserve account (cash, government bonds). The most intuitive model. Risk: trust in the issuer.

Crypto-backed (DAI/USDS by MakerDAO). You lock ETH or USDC worth 150%+ of the DAI you want to issue — a buffer against price swings. Governed by smart contracts, no central issuer. Risk: if ETH drops too fast, the collateral is auto-liquidated.

Algorithmic (UST — the cautionary tale). No real backing — just an algorithm and token mechanics. Elegant in theory. In practice: the 2022 collapse. No major algorithmic stablecoin has survived a genuine stress test.

What People Actually Use Stablecoins For

Trading. Lock in profits after a rally — without wiring to a bank. Redeploy on the dip. This is the dominant use case on every exchange.

Cross-border transfers. Send $500 abroad in seconds — no SWIFT, no bank, no 3–5 business days. On the TRON network, the fee is under $1. That's why USDT has become the de-facto dollar in countries with limited banking access.

Inflation hedge. In Argentina, Turkey, and Nigeria, people hold USDT instead of local currency. Not as an investment — as a way to keep $1 = $1 when the national currency loses 50% per year.

DeFi yield. Deploy USDC into a protocol and earn 4–8% annually in dollar terms. No stocks, no bonds, no broker. But with smart-contract risk — always read the audits.

What to Know Before Using Them

A stablecoin is a tool, not an investment. It won't appreciate in value — that's the entire point. For trading, transfers, and DeFi, it's indispensable. For storage: know the risks. USDT is less transparent about its reserves. USDC is more open but carries counterparty risk (its banking partners). DAI is decentralized but more complex. Algorithmic stablecoins: avoid.

My personal recommendation: if you're just starting out, use USDC. Circle publishes monthly audits. More detail is available at circle.com/usdc. That doesn't mean USDC is without risk — but at least you can see exactly what backs each token.

This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

 Jonathan

Author

Jonathan

Editor

I love writing about cryptocurrency, am interested in general trends, and try to reflect this in my materials.

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