Bill Barhydt is the founder and CEO of Abra, a global crypto wallet and exchange network.
There are plenty of misconceptions surrounding stablecoins. One of the main things that I hear frequently is that they will somehow bring the volatility of current crypto markets to heel.
Maybe this is implied by the name, or maybe it’s just a misunderstanding of crypto market dynamics when compared to other more traditional financial markets, but stablecoins by themselves won’t smooth the turbulent fiat value of crypto assets. Only a massive amount of liquidity in the crypto space and a significant amount of time will do that.
Instead, stablecoins will have a role to play in broadening cryptocurrency markets. In my mind, the most promising and often overlooked application for stablecoins is their utility as on-ramps for assets moving from traditional financial markets into crypto.
I like to use the analogy that if cryptocurrencies are like the Matrix – a digitally-native technology that is completely apart from the physical world – then stablecoins can be like the hard line between these two worlds. In this case, the hard line would exist between the new world of computer-code-based value, e.g. bitcoin, and the traditional value system based on physical assets, e.g. fiat or the U.S. dollar.
Right now, it’s hard to get the two worlds to interoperate – there’s a lot of needless friction that comes at the costs of time and money. Relying on legacy tools to enter cryptocurrency systems still limits access for billions of unbanked or underbanked people across the globe.
Stablecoins allow people to take advantage of traditional financial tools like access to loans and credit, but also take advantage of things that cryptocurrencies do well, such as sending money quickly and cheaply, creating economies around smart contracts, and powering a slew of decentralized financial applications.
So instead of thinking of stablecoins as some kind of giant ballast that will keep the crypto ship steady, think of them instead as a port – a place for people to load and unload assets.
So far, there are three models emerging as potential methods of creating and managing stablecoins:
At a higher level, stablecoins are enabling decentralization by acting as the bridge between traditional banking and completely decentralized exchanges as well as non-custodial wallets.
I also predict that we will see next generation stablecoins that function more like stable assets.
For example, a bitcoin-based share of Apple could allow a consumer to hold Apple stock without the consumer or the broker ever taking possession of an actual Apple share. The amount of bitcoin being held would simply adjust automatically via smart contract to maintain parity with its underlying value versus Apple shares. This opens up the world of decentralized investing via crypto to other non-crypto asset classes. That is a big problem that crypto solves.
Ultimately, I think that stablecoins will play an important role in bridging traditional financial markets with the emerging, programmable financial tools enabled by cryptocurrencies.
Reducing the friction between the crypto and fiat financial systems will help increase access to new kinds of assets and opportunities, which is critical for projects and companies currently building in the crypto space. Stablecoins and stable-assets also represent a tremendous opportunity for people so far left out of crypto to find a viable use case and entry point.
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