Total supply of stablecoins dropped sharply for first time ever in Q2

CointelegraphPublicado a 2022-06-16Actualizado a 2022-06-16

Resumen

A separate graph also saw USDC and BUSD supply drop sharply in May, however both have since rebounded and are close to being back to their respective all-time high levels.

The total supply of stablecoins saw its sharpest drop in history during Q2 2022, with stablecoin redemptions spiking as a result of “short-term liquidity and concerns about insolvency that were not present during the panic of 2020," according to data analytics firm Coinmetrics.

CoinMetrics head of research and development Lucas Nuzzi highlighted the data via Twitter on June 16, with a graph showing the total supply of stablecoins since January 2020.

“22Q2 is the first time in the history of stablecoins where Total Supply decreased. Even if we exclude UST, over 10B has been redeemed *directly from the treasuries* of major issuers.”

The list included DAI, UDST, OMNI and TRON, SAI, USDK, PAX. While Circle’s USDC and Binance’s BUSD were compiled in a separate graph. Terra’s original variant of UST was not included in the graph.

Nuzzi noted that Tether saw the most redemptions of all centralized stablecoin issuers, with 7 billion of the total USDT supply wiped off the board in April and May, and is likely to have been caused by actions of a few, rather than any significant market-wide movements.

“The sharpness of that decrease suggests that a single entity, or small cohort, was behind it,” he said.

The implosion of the Terra eco-system including its native LUNA token and UST stablecoin in May coincided with Tether’s USDT de-pegging from the U.S. dollar by around 5%. As a result, around 7 billion USDT was redeemed as big players looked to exit the market and avoid any further potential carnage.

Another project to take a big hit was MakerDAO’s DAI, which saw 40% of its supply retired as a result of the “largest liquidation event of its history.”

USDC and BUSD were also included in a separate graph, and also show a sharp drop in supply of around 5 billion in May, however, both have since rebounded and are close to being back to their respective all-time high levels of around 65 billion and 48 billion a pop.

The unique market conditions of 2022 offer a likely explanation as to why stablecoin users have been taking risk off the table over the past few weeks.

So far, the crypto sector has seen the Terra eco-system cause a crash worth around $40 billion, while lending platform Celsius and venture capital firm Three Arrows Capital have also been fighting to avoid insolvency due in part to reported liquidations, exposure to Terra, declining asset prices and potentially unsustainable business models.

Tether, which is also exposed to Celsius via $10 million equity investment in 2020 and a $1 billion loan it gave to the company last year, issued a statement on Monday noting that the plummeting price of Celsius native token and the firm’s liquidity troubles will have “no impact” on its reserves.

The firm stated that its lending activity with Celsius has “always been overcollateralized.”

Lecturas Relacionadas

94.000 millones de yuanes, la mayor financiación de este año para robots humanoides ha aparecido

La empresa de robótica humana Neura, con sede en Múnich, ha completado una ronda de financiación Serie C de 14.000 millones de dólares (unos 94.900 millones de RMB), lo que supone la mayor inversión del año en este sector. Tras la operación, su valoración alcanza los 70.000 millones de dólares. La relevancia de esta ronda radica en la participación de inversores industriales como Schaeffler y Bosch, lo que señala un cambio estratégico: el foco pasa de la demostración tecnológica a la implementación práctica en fábricas. Neura, fundada por el experto en robótica industrial Armin Zeher, ha priorizado desde el inicio la aplicabilidad en entornos de producción real, contando ya con BMW como cliente. Otros inversores como NVIDIA, Amazon y Qualcomm aportan perspectivas complementarias en infraestructura de computación, logística y tecnología. El sector de la robótica humana está experimentando una afluencia masiva de capital, impulsada por dos factores clave: los avances en modelos de IA de gran escala, que mejoran la percepción y la toma de decisiones de los robots, y la creciente presión por la escasez y el encarecimiento de la mano de obra en la manufactura global. Actualmente, las empresas siguen dos caminos principales: los robots humanoides de propósito general (como Figure AI), con un horizonte comercial a más largo plazo, y los enfocados en escenarios industriales verticales y específicos (como Neura), que ofrecen una ruta de comercialización más rápida y definida. El campo de batalla real para estos robots ya no es el laboratorio, sino el suelo de la fábrica. Los escenarios de manufactura industrial, por su entorno estructurado y tareas repetitivas, se consideran los primeros en permitir una adopción a escala. Los entornos de trabajo peligrosos también tienen un gran potencial. Sin embargo, los principales retos para la adopción masiva ya no son puramente técnicos, sino de ingeniería y modelo comercial. Destacan los elevados costes de adaptación a cada línea de producción específica y la necesidad de desarrollar sistemas de mantenimiento y servicio locales robustos para garantizar la operación continua. La entrada de gigantes industriales históricos como inversores y la presencia inicial de robots en fábricas como las de BMW marcan un punto de inflexión: la confianza del sector se consolida y la pregunta central evoluciona de "si es posible" a "cómo hacerlo mejor, más rápido y de forma más estable".

marsbitHace 7 hora(s)

94.000 millones de yuanes, la mayor financiación de este año para robots humanoides ha aparecido

marsbitHace 7 hora(s)

Trading

Spot
Futuros
活动图片