Key Takeaways
- The Federal Reserve has published its post-mortem analysis of the Silicon Valley Bank failure.
- When the bank collapsed earlier this year, it triggered a run on USDC that caused the stablecoin to depeg from the dollar.
- The Fed report explores how the USDC depeg spread contagiously across other stablecoins.
The Federal Reserve has published a detailed analysis examining the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) failure of March 2023 and how it rippled through the stablecoin market.
The report highlights how stablecoins that are designed to reliably track the dollar are vulnerable to confidence shocks, contagion, and self-reinforcing withdrawals, just like traditional bank deposits.
Tangem
BitBox
Blockstream
How the SVB Collapse Triggered a Stablecoin Depeg
The Fed’s post-mortem recounts how SVB’s collapse triggered a swift run not only on the bank itself but also on one of the largest stablecoins, USDC.
When Circle disclosed that it could not access uninsured reserves held at SVB, market participants rushed to redeem their USDC for cash.
While Circle was able to keep up with redemption requests during normal business hours, panic continued to set in over the following weekend, when primary redemptions weren’t available.
On these days, efforts to reduce USDC exposure created unsustainable sell pressure on secondary markets, causing the stablecoin to temporarily trade below the dollar.
Contagion and DeFi Transmission Channels
A key insight from the Federal Reserve’s analysis is how stress in one stablecoin can propagate to others through ecosystem interlinkages.
For instance, USDC’s depeg quickly transmitted to Dai, which is tied to USDC through smart contract vaults designed to maintain dollar parity.
At the height of the SVB crisis, mechanisms intended to stabilize prices under normal conditions became channels for contagion.
As traders sought to exit their USDC positions, liquidity drained from these facilities, exerting pressure on Dai’s peg as well.
The Fed report concludes that stress events in digital-asset markets can involve two-way feedback between traditional and decentralized finance sectors.
In this case, a run on a conventional bank helped trigger a run on stablecoins, which then reverberated through DeFi protocols.
While they stopped short of prescribing specific regulatory measures, the authors called for further research to better understand how financial contagion can cross the DeFi–TradFi boundary as stablecoins become increasingly integrated into mainstream finance.


































































































































