[Featured Research]BUSD: Dancing with the Regulator

Mirror2023-02-22 tarihinde yayınlandı2023-02-22 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

To access more data to contextualize ongoing events in the ecosystem, make sure to check out this BUSD-focused dashboard the CM research team has created, as well as our charting tools, formula builder, and Python API Client.

A series of regulatory enforcement actions in the U.S. have demanded digital asset industry participants’ attention to start 2023. Headline-grabbing events in the last few weeks have included the end to Kraken’s “Staking-as-a-Service” offering and Paxos halting the minting of new Binance USD (BUSD) tokens—a USD stablecoin—after it received a Wells notice from the SEC. Financial market and bank regulators’ actions and statements have the potential to shape the future of the digital assets industry in many ways making this a critical topic for careful analysis.

While all of the recent developments warrant analysis, Paxos’ BUSD announcement is the most important in the $120B+ stablecoin ecosystem so far this year, and is an area where we also happen to have a great amount of data. This week’s State of the Network therefore focuses on this story and offers a data-driven perspective into the immediate impact on-chain and on crypto market structure.

A Brief History of BUSD

The demand for low-volatility crypto assets that could be used for liquidity and utility helped bring about the quick rise of stablecoins in the digital assets ecosystem over the last few years. Stablecoins (the majority of which are US-dollar denominated and backed by USD reserves) can serve as a highly convenient medium of exchange (e.g., global donations, B2B payments abroad, international payroll, payment for goods and services), especially in high-inflation jurisdictions with strong demand for US dollars. Stablecoins can also effectively serve as replacements for fiat onramps and provide needed liquidity for crypto investors who lack access to a direct fiat gateway and desire a relatively safe place to park funds in times of high volatility.

Binance, the largest exchange today by total spot volume, got in on the action with its own stablecoin, BUSD, which was launched in September 2019 at a time when total stablecoin market capitalization was only about $5B. BUSD was created in partnership with Paxos, a crypto infrastructure company that also issues Pax Dollar (USDP) and a gold-backed stablecoin Pax Gold (PAXG). Being issued by Paxos Trust, BUSD—like USDP and PAXG—was regulated by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) and was issued on Ethereum by Paxos as an ERC-20 token.

Source: Coin Metrics Network Data

The supply of BUSD remained below $1B until early 2021 as crypto trading volumes started accelerating on Binance. BUSD’s supply reached as high as $23B during the peak of the FTX crisis, representing almost a quarter of total stablecoin supply on Ethereum at the time.

As crypto liquidity has waned in the wake of FTX, BUSD supply receded to around $16B. Then, last week on February 12th, The Wall Street Journal reported that SEC staff sent a notice of possible impending enforcement (called a Wells notice) to Paxos, alleging that BUSD is an unregistered security. The next day, Paxos issued a statement saying that it would end its relationship with Binance and halt new token minting of BUSD with redemptions still being honored through at least Feb. 2024. But without the ability to mint new tokens, this greatly hinders the arbitrage mechanism that usually keeps order in BUSD markets for traders.

The impact across markets was immediately noticeable, with BUSD (in blue) falling below its $1 peg and USDT rising (in purple) to a premium above $1, indicative of rising demand for USDT and falling demand for holding BUSD.

Source: CM Market Analytics Charting Tools

In the week since Paxos’ announcement, BUSD free float supply has fallen by about $4B to $12B. Although Paxos’ USDP and PAXG were seemingly (and crucially) not similarly called out in the Wells notice, the supply for both has fallen $200M (-20%) and $30M (-6%), respectively. Meanwhile, USDT supply has risen $2B from $66.5B (Ethereum & Tron) to $68.5B.

Source: Coin Metrics Network Data

A Different Data Profile?

Looking further into the data behind BUSD to provide additional context, we see that BUSD’s footprint is similar in some ways to its major counterparts like Tether (USDT) as a token for spot crypto trading, but also has some striking differences.

First, looking across the Coin Metrics exchange universe, we can see that BUSD spot volume has hovered around $6B/day, about 6x that of Circle’s USD Coin or USDC (inclusive of major pairs on the decentralized exchanges DEXs Uniswap and Sushiswap). However, Tether is still the predominant stablecoin used in crypto asset trading. Like USDT, BUSD is a popular quote asset on Binance in trading pairs.

Source: Coin Metrics Market Data Feed

Another interesting metric is the concentration of supply on-chain. BUSD supply has historically been highly concentrated into the top 100 accounts, indicating that the supply has mostly been in exchange wallets and bridges, facilitating trading off-chain on CEXs—mostly Binance itself. On the other hand, USDC and Tether exhibit more dispersion in their holder base.

Source: Coin Metrics Network Data

The largest holder of BUSD is an Ethereum account facilitating the “Binance-Peg BUSD" which allows BUSD to be bridged between Ethereum and other blockchains, mostly to Binance’s Binance Smart Chain (BSC) as a ‘wrapped’ instantiation of BUSD. This account currently holds over $5B of BUSD. Token bridges came under intense scrutiny last year when some of the underlying fragilities surfaced explosively in the $325M “Wormhole” bridge hack and $600M Ronin bridge hack.

Indeed, some have pondered whether the overwhelming dominance and scale of this wrapped BUSD structure whereby BUSD would be issued on Ethereum and then mostly bridged to Binance Smart Chain was something the SEC particularly scrutinized in its analysis and separated BUSD from other fiat-backed stablecoins.

Smart contracts can also be big holders of supply, like lending pools and DEXs. However, when we look at the percentage of total supply held by smart contracts, we can see that only a small amount of BUSD supply (~2%) is held by smart contracts on Ethereum, indicating that it is not used as robustly within DeFi applications as Tether (15%), and to a much larger extent, USDC (34%) is on Ethereum.

The lack of BUSD usage within Ethereum’s DeFi ecosystem is a relief, as it will likely limit the downstream impacts to major protocols’ health. Nevertheless, some DeFi protocol DAOs have started to pull back and rethink relationships with Paxos stablecoins.

Source: Coin Metrics Network Data Pro

Although BUSD has a negligible role within the Ethereum DeFi ecosystem, BUSD plays a big role within Binance’s own smart contract chain—Binance Smart Chain (BSC), as suggested by the amount of BUSD bridged from Ethereum to BSC mentioned above.

Finally, although it has grown strongly as of late, the number of smaller retail addresses holding between $1 and $1,000 of BUSD remains relatively below its major counterparts USDC and Tether (looking on Ethereum only), even after adjusting for total supply.

Source: Coin Metrics Network Data

These sample metrics help make a point that not all stablecoins ought to be lumped together, as they can serve very different purposes.

Conclusion

The ongoing regulatory debate surrounding stablecoins has the potential to impact both emerging and established companies operating within the crypto ecosystem. Regulatory clarity would be a positive development for companies seeking to navigate this complex space. Although it is too early to say definitively, the unique aspects of BUSD may have contributed to regulator scrutiny, rather than it being a part of a broad-based crackdown on all stablecoins.

The BUSD development is just one of many in recent weeks. Each has unique features and challenges, and for a general overview of developments we recommend a helpful walkthrough from NYDIG here. With FTX’s collapse still lingering freshly in mind, a fine line must be walked between prudent protections and guidelines to cultivate technological innovation—and a chasm of overreach.

To access more data to contextualize ongoing events in the ecosystem, make sure to check out this BUSD-focused dashboard the CM research team has created, as well as our charting tools, formula builder, and Python API Client.

Network Data Insights

Summary Metrics

Source: Coin Metrics Network Data Pro

Bitcoin active addresses rose 6% over the past week while Ethereum active addresses fell by 3%. Active addresses across most stablecoins fell in comparison to last week’s peak in activity after the Paxos news, with BUSD active addresses falling 33%.

Coin Metrics Updates

This week’s updates from the Coin Metrics team:

For the best in-depth discussion of CM data and research, come check out our research community on the web3 social media platform gm.xyz.

For more coverage of these recent stablecoin developments, check out last week’s issue of Coin Metrics’ State of the Market.

As always, if you have any feedback or requests please let us know here.

İlgili Okumalar

Deciphering the Ethereum Foundation's New Structure: Reaffirming Self-Sovereignty Amid Institutionalization Trends

Summary: The Ethereum Foundation (EF) has announced a major restructuring, laying off 20% of its staff and introducing a new five-layer operational framework. This move aims to clarify the EF's mission and reaffirm Ethereum's core principle of self-sovereignty amidst growing institutionalization in the crypto space. The five layers are: 1. **Protocol Layer**: Focuses on maintaining Ethereum's foundational "CROPS" values—Censorship-resistant, Robust, Open, Private, and Secure. This involves core technical work like secure hard forks and mitigating toxic MEV. 2. **Access Layer**: Ensures users can practically exercise self-sovereignty through actions like reading the chain and making transactions. A key principle is the "zero option," meaning a trusted, non-intermediated path must always exist as an alternative to any centralized service. 3. **User Layer**: Bridges the protocol and access layers by grounding EF's work in the real needs of users and organizations. This is seen as crucial for moving beyond a purely research-driven approach and ensuring development effectively serves the ecosystem. 4. **Community Layer**: Responsible for building and maintaining consensus around Ethereum's core values both internally and externally. This involves guarding against centralization, upholding technological neutrality, and preventing short-term commercial interests from undermining CROPS principles. 5. **Institutional Layer**: Manages EF's engagement with institutions, but with the precondition of self-sovereignty. The goal is not to make it easier for institutions to control users, but to demonstrate how Ethereum's technology can enable better integrations. The article argues that while institutional adoption brings legitimacy, it also risks diluting crypto's foundational ethos of decentralization. The new structure represents EF's effort to navigate this tension, upholding its core mission while actively engaging with a broader, more complex ecosystem.

marsbit13 dk önce

Deciphering the Ethereum Foundation's New Structure: Reaffirming Self-Sovereignty Amid Institutionalization Trends

marsbit13 dk önce

OpenRouter: How Did This 'AI Model Relay Station' Achieve a $10 Billion Valuation?

OpenRouter: The Model Router Building a $10B+ Company This article explores OpenRouter, a platform that aggregates access to over 400 AI models from 70+ providers (like OpenAI, Claude, Gemini) through a single API. It has grown into a unicorn with a $1.3B valuation by 2026, processing massive scale—reaching 100 trillion tokens monthly. Its core value isn't just being a "model supermarket." For developers building real-world AI applications, managing multiple models for different tasks (e.g., cheap models for titles, powerful ones for long articles) is complex. OpenRouter acts as a critical "model scheduling layer," handling routing, failover between providers, cost optimization, and enterprise features like zero-data-retention policies and budget controls. OpenRouter's business model is a "toll fee": it charges a small platform fee (5.5%) on purchased credits while passing model costs directly to users. Its revenue scales with the tokens flowing through its system, which saw explosive growth as AI apps evolved. Key growth drivers include: 1) The explosion of specialized models, increasing choice complexity; 2) AI apps shifting focus from performance to cost optimization; 3) The rise of AI agents that require more reliable, multi-step model calls. However, risks remain. Large enterprises or cloud providers (AWS, Google Cloud) could build similar internal gateways. Its position between model suppliers and developers could also create future tension over pricing and data control. To stay ahead, OpenRouter must deepen its enterprise features and prove it's more than just a request forwarder.

marsbit33 dk önce

OpenRouter: How Did This 'AI Model Relay Station' Achieve a $10 Billion Valuation?

marsbit33 dk önce

Bitcoin Falls Below $60,000 Again; After 20 Months, We've Reached a New Low

Bitcoin Drops Below $60,000, Hitting a 20-Month Low Bitcoin fell below the key $60,000 psychological level again, reaching a low of $59,023—its lowest point in approximately 20 months, dating back to October 2024. While it later recovered slightly to around $60,600, this marks its third significant breach of $60,000 this year. The downturn is attributed to two primary factors. First, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs are experiencing their longest streak of net outflows since launch, with nearly $5.94 billion withdrawn over 30 days. This creates sustained selling pressure as Authorized Participants sell Bitcoin to meet redemptions. Second, shifting macroeconomic expectations are adding pressure. Strong U.S. job data and hawkish remarks from Fed officials have increased market pricing for potential rate hikes, reversing the earlier liquidity-driven bullish sentiment and prompting a shift away from risk assets like Bitcoin. Analyst views are mixed. 21Shares maintains a bullish long-term outlook, expecting prices to recover towards $100,000, citing historical post-halving cycles and substantial ETF holdings as a base. In contrast, Arthur Hayes predicts a potential bottom around $40,000 within six months due to persistent Fed hawkishness. CryptoQuant suggests, based on on-chain data, that the market may not find a bottom until prices fall below the average investor cost basis around $53,000, potentially extending the bearish phase into late 2026 or early 2027. The immediate focus is on upcoming U.S. inflation data and Fed signals. Lower-than-expected CPI could offer relief, but confirmation of sticky inflation or continued ETF outflows may lead to further downside pressure. Bitcoin's ability to hold above $60,000 remains a critical test for the near-term market direction.

Odaily星球日报1 saat önce

Bitcoin Falls Below $60,000 Again; After 20 Months, We've Reached a New Low

Odaily星球日报1 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片