Market
MakerDao’s Short (and Long) Term Fixes for Dai’s Broken Peg
Published
4 Monaten agoon
By
- As traders gobble up stablecoins for yield farming, demand for MakerDAO’s dai (DAI) has sent the stablecoin’s peg skyward.
- The yield farming demand continues to put pressure on dai’s $1 peg, which has been under consistent stress since Black Thursday when market volatility sent dai’s price to $1.10.
- MakerDAO’s community is debating some tweaks to its monetary policy to restore the peg, though Maker’s creator believes the only long-term solution is adding additional, varied collateral to the DAO.
Booming demand for stablecoins in DeFi’s yield farming landscape is breaking the peg for Ethereum’s only crypto-collateralized stablecoin. The Maker community is searching for a solution to drive the peg back down, but not everyone is sold that these solutions will work long-term.
MakerDAO’s dai, which uses ether, stablecoins and tokens as collateral to retain a $1 price point, is trading above its targeted peg. At time of publication, dai is trading at $1.04.
It’s not uncommon for dai to fluctuate above or below this price point. But the peg’s recent upwards drift, which continues a trend that began in March as market volatility led to a trading flight into stablecoins, is likely in response to growing demand for stablecoins in Ethereum’s blossoming yield farming market.
“The whole yield farming craze – and explosion in DeFi in general – has really impacted the peg a lot in the short run. The community responded by setting all rates to zero. The demand for dai is so extreme that even these zero rates don’t make a difference,” Rune Christensen, MakerDAO’s founder, told CoinDesk.
Exploding stablecoin demand (and supply)
The supply of stablecoins in DeFi lending markets has indeed exploded in 2020. Before SushiSwap migrated its pools out of Uniswap, roughly $340 million of Uniswap‘s $1.43 billion in total value locked (TLV) was split between USDT, USDC and dai. DeFi’s largest lending pool, Aave, has stablecoins amounting to roughly $620 million of its overall $1.7 billion TLV.
As demand for centralized, fiat-backed stablecoins like USDT, USDC and others surges, Maker DAO’s dai has found itself caught up in the demand’s undertow. Per DeFi Pulse data at the time of publication, $354 million worth of dai is floating around in liquidity pools on Uniswap, Yearn, Compound, Curve, Balancer and SushiSwap. This $354 million is over three-fourths of dai’s 434.4 million circulating supply.
Read more: Uniswap September Volume Tops August’s $6.7B Record in 10 Days on Dizzying DeFi Demand
Such terrific trading demand has sent dai’s peg northward to $1.03 at the time of publication. With DeFi farming aggravating a peg slippage that has affected dai for the better half of the year, Maker’s community is searching for ways to alter the protcol’s monetary policy to drive the peg back down.
But not everyone is sold on which policy switch makes sense.
The makings of MakerDAO
Dai works like this: Borrowers mint dai by placing some other crypto asset (like ether or other stablecoins) into a smart contract “vault” as collateral. MakerDAO, the protocol, charges these borrowers a “stability fee” (SF), a sort of interest rate that the borrowers must pay back in dai to pay down their debt.
On the other side of this are the dai holders, who get paid a “dai savings rate” (DSR) for staking their dai in a smart contract. This DSR is another interest rate of sorts, rewarding dai holders in-kind for their savings.
The stability fee on (most all) Maker vaults has been 0% since Black Thursday, March 12. On this fateful day, when assets across the board tanked tremendously, dai began trading well above its $1.00 peg as traders scrambled to hedge the market bloodshed. Much like low rates for centrally planned monetary systems, the 0% SF for dai was an effort to incentivize dai borrowing to grease the markets with liquidity and so drive the peg back down.
Read more: How MakerDAO’s Stablecoin Survived the Crash, Smart Contract Bugs and Full Decentralization
The 0% SF wasn’t enough to fix the issue, though, and the community voted to raise it for most vaults to 2% because, in Christensen’s words, “the community was taking on a lot of risk but was not being compensated for that risk.”
Searching for a more tenable fix, Maker’s community voted this year to add support for ZRX, MANA, wrapped BTC, KNC, TUSD, USDT, PAXUSD and USDC.
Even with this motley array of coins collateralizing more dai, the yield farming craze is keeping the stablecoin above its 1 buck peg, so the community is mulling over other – and in some cases, more extreme – measures to re-align dai with its $1 mandate.
Leaning on USDC
One solution involves returning to square one, in a way, by tinkering with Maker’s primary USDC vault.
The Maker community originally voted to add USDC collateral immediately following Black Thursday as an emergency measure to restore the $1 peg. Now, some community members are in favor of lowering the collateralization requirement for the USDC-DAI minting pair from 110% to as low as 101%. This would mean users would have to lock 101 USDC (not 110 per current rules) to mint 100 DAI.
In a MakerDAO forum discussion, Aaron Bartsch asked community members if they wanted to “further reduce the USDC-A collateralization ratio [the “A” refers to USDC’s primary vault on the Maker protocol] to further incentivize dai minting with USDC to ‘arb’ the peg down.”
Read more: How DeFi ‘Degens’ Are Gaming Ethereum’s Money Legos
He ran a poll with options to reduce the CR to 105%, 104%, 103%, 102%, 101%, or not at all. The option to lower the CR to 105% garnered the most votes at 41%, while the second most popular option to lower it to 101% received 36% of the vote.
In his conversation with CoinDesk, Christensen mentioned that a 1.01 CR would make the most sense as it could “put a price ceiling on dai.” Since DAI is trading at $1.04, every 101 USDC deposited into the vault would generate $104 worth of dai; this, in theory, should be enough to incentivize traders to arbitrage the difference and thus drive the peg down. A CR higher than DAI’s current price wouldn’t produce enough incentive.
Questions remain
Not everyone is down with the fix, though. Questions were floated regarding how a liquidation engine for such a narrow CR would work (liquidations for USDC vaults are currently turned off).
Others questioned whether the dai hypothetically minted from such a change would even dilute the traded supply enough to drive the peg down. Each Maker vault has a “debt ceiling” that caps how much dai can be borrowed at any given time. Currently, USDC’s primary vault has a 40 million DAI ceiling with $33 million locked.
“No one is arbing the peg because the debt ceilings are too low to do so effectively,” MakerDAO member rileyjt said in the forum discussion. “If you mint all the dai possible and market sell it on Curve, it won’t even go below the peg on that one DEX. Let alone the entire ecosystem.”
“If it’s not enough, then the debt ceiling will have to be continually increased,” Christensen added in our conversation.
MakerDAO’s version of ‘QE’
Another proposal, dubbed by its author as Maker’s version of “quantitative easing,” also looks to USDC collateral as a solution – though in a more creative way.
Sébastien Derivaux proposed the “creation [of] a USDC-M vault with no stability fees and a liquidation ratio of 100%” that “only whitelisted address from Maker can use.” In practice, approved users would buy USDC on the market with a dai flash loan, stake this USDC in the USDC-M vault to mint dai, pay back the flash loan, and repeat the process until there’s enough new dai in the market to drive the peg down.
Critics of this proposal noted that it risks abstracting Maker too much for the average user and resembles the credit gymnastics of legacy finance.
Others went as far as to say this would tarnish Maker’s reputation entirely.
“You deposit 101K USDC and want 101K DAI in return. This is called printing dai,” user Planet_X protested. “In this plan Maker is set up as a trader in its own currency with more privileges (a special USDC pool and exchange mechanism) than no other market maker has access to.
“If the community uses such a solution it will cause a massive blow to credibility. You will probably be able to fix the peg in the short run but at the cost of sinking Maker karma below that of Tether.”
Derivaux agreed there is a “philosophical (and product position) argument against [it],” but still considers the proposal worthwhile and preferable to lowering the USDC-A vault’s CR.
The way forward
Both proposals will be put to an on-chain vote this coming Monday to see if they hold water with the rest of the Maker community.
Even if they are passed, the protocol’s inventor has his doubts as to whether or not they will work in the long run. He’s also wary of relying too much on a centralized stablecoin like USDC, whose addresses can be blacklisted and coins frozen. Relying too much on USDC creates a central point of failure, and loading vaults with too much essentially amounts to “asset capture” if the competing stablecoin undergirds too much of dai’s collateral.
Instead, Christensen favors a multi-asset approach. He believes the only way to fix the broken peg in the long run is to do what Maker did when dai’s price went skyward following Black Thursday: add more collateral.
Read more: Yearn, YAM and the Rise of Crypto’s ‘Weird DeFi’ Moment
“What is really needed is collateral onboarding. New tokens and real world assets like tokenized real estate,” he told CoinDesk. “As the community adds more collateral, that gives way to more funding, which allows for more collateral onboarding and thus an increase to the dai supply.”
This is the only feasible solution to Christensen, who noted that other policy tweaks have not delivered long-term results.
“They set the stability fee to 0% on everything and it didn’t fix the peg, so I think that shows that there’s no other option but to onboard more collateral. Possibly the stablecoin solution works, but it’s not exactly a long-term solution, it’s a medium-term solution.”
Ironically, demand for dai hasn’t been damped even with its price instability, as evidenced by the throngs of DeFi degens who are willing to stomach the premium to farm food-themed tokens.
When asked about the danger of a floating dai peg to the project’s longevity, Christense said that, even if it’s “not the end of the world in the short term,” that “in the longer term it doesn’t align with the original goal of Maker.”
“Regular people don’t want a currency that fluctuates a little bit.”
The problem of Ethereum’s high gas fees
Still, he also holds that the dai’s peg is not the primary problem for its users; it’s Ethereum’s blockchain, bloated with yield farming transactions, requiring exorbitant fees. Scaling Ethereum, then, is “part of the bigger picture” to Christensen as the MakerDAO community searches for its own way to “distribute risk” away from centralized stablecoins like USDC into other collateral, like the token additions currently proposed and “tokenized real world assets” down the line.
Read more: MakerDAO Passes $1B Milestone in DeFi First
So at a time when Ethereum is facing its own issues regarding scaling, its (arguably) flagship DeFi protocol in Maker is wrestling with how to stay true to its original mandate: creating a decentralized stablecoin for a decentralized financial landscape.
Relying too much on USDC (or other stablecoins) for collateral may compromise this future, so that’s why Maker’s creator believes the solution to this challenge comes from adding as many collateral pairs as possible.
“I wouldn’t think of it as a threat, I’d think of it as an opportunity,” Christensen concluded.
You may like
-
Crypto Long & Short: The Christmas Poem Edition
-
Bitcoin Third-Busiest Trade as Investors Short Up Dollar
-
Bitcoin Could See an Epic Short-Squeeze Once This Key Level is Broken
-
Ensuring trust in crypto is tough, but audits and transparency go a long way
-
Ethereum 2.0’s long and winding road to scalability launch
-
As Long as Ethereum Holds $350 Range, It’s Set to Double: Analyst
Market
Altcoin Rally Dimming Bitcoin’s Shine, Polkadot Gains 34% in One Week
Published
45 Sekunden agoon
Dezember 29, 2020By
Polkadot (DOT) saw daily gains of 22.5% wrapping up an impressive week with an almost 34% rise in its value.
Bitcoin bullish run looks to have come to a halt amidst an altcoin rally which has seen relatively lower coins put up impressive performances in the past few weeks. Bitcoin dominance is gradually fading as many experts believe the biggest digital coin is backing down as some top altcoin are showing strong “moves” or signals.
Bitcoin hit an all-time high over the weekend, the third time its price has done so in just over 2 months. The price of the biggest digital coin touched $28,400 on December 27, before a lightning drop took it to $27,000 just hours of that incredible feat.
Bitcoin failed to hold onto the $27,000 mark as its price further dropped to $26,000 a day after and is now testing lower levels centered on $26,000 as immediate support. Reports from crypto exchanges revealed BTC/USD trading at lows of $25,830 during the early hours of December 29.
While Bitcoin has seen red over a couple of days, some altcoins are putting up impressive numbers, giving off signals of a strong altcoin rally. Despite XRP’s current issues, the altcoin market is showing glimpses of its glory days as some digital coins are poised to see major gains over the next couple of weeks. Ethereum (ETH) is at the forefront of the rally, with its price climbing above $700 for the first time since May 2018.
Polkadot (DOT) also saw daily gains of 22.5% wrapping up an impressive week with an almost 34% rise in its value. The coin is now the seventh-largest token by market cap. Kusama (KSM), a cousin of Polkadot, also saw its price gain 46% last week, pushing its price from $43.1 to $63. The digital token is currently trading at $56 but experts are adamant a breakout above $65 is possible as the token has rebounded off the 20-day exponential moving average ($50.90)
Speaking on the possibility of a long term altcoin rally, analyst Van de Poppe stated that altcoins are next in line to see greens. He added that the next “impulse wave” on Bitcoin next year should be able to take the market to $40,000 or $50,000, but until then, the possibility of a continuance altcoin rally is very much likely.
Although many factors could be in play with regards to the latest Bitcoin price dip, it’s recent fallout with Ripple’s XRP leads the way. Ripple was hit with a lawsuit from the United States Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) and subsequently suffered drops that left its price in a pit. XRP, the fourth-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, is now trading at $0.20 as news broke that Coinbase, a major US cryptocurrency exchange has decided to suspend its trading from next month.
next Altcoin News, Bitcoin News, Cryptocurrency news, News
Crypto fanatic, writer and researcher. Thinks that Blockchain is second to a digital camera on the list of greatest inventions.
You have successfully joined our subscriber list.
Market
Taylor Monahan: The Year the Narrative Became the Truth
Published
5 Stunden agoon
Dezember 29, 2020By
The year 2020, as told by the Crypto Believers, will most certainly go down in history as the year the curtain was finally pulled back.
For so long we sounded the alarm about the threat of centralized entities. For so long we warned of the unsustainable monetary policy of the United States Federal Reserve. And then, suddenly, a global pandemic begets “money printer go BRRR” begets endless inaction by those who claim to be our leaders. Finally, those outside our bubble began to question what they once knew.
This post is part of CoinDesk’s 2020 Year in Review – a collection of op-eds, essays and interviews about the year in crypto and beyond. Taylor Monahan is the founder and CEO of MyCrypto, a simple dashboard for managing all your Ethereum-based assets.
There were signs of a new, shared realization as non-believers began to quip, “If we can just print money, I shouldn’t have to pay taxes” and, “This is unsustainable. We’re screwing ourselves.” There were also signs they began to see how much absurdity dominates our lives. Discrimination didn’t end in 1863 or in 1964 or in 2019. We have never had “the lowest Fatality (Mortality) Rate in the World.” The stock market is not the economy. Their truth is not true.
Moreso, the truth seemed to be whatever those in power wanted it to be. Or rather, the truth is whatever we, those not in power, believe it to be. So long as enough people believe it to be true, it is true.
Our new reality manifested in everything from increased anxiety and depression as the world remained in a state of locked-down uncertainty, to debates about masks and potential COVID-19 treatments, to the Black Lives Matter movement coming back with a vengeance.
One of the least-complex manifestations of the power of shared belief was the curious case of Hertz’s stock price pumping 900% in the weeks following its bankruptcy filing. It left otherwise rational, mature, market-minded adults (and Hertz itself) bewildered. As far as anyone has been able to sort out, after a lifetime of believing The Adults knew what they were doing The Kids realized the truth and took action on the not-so-secret secret that you don’t win the market by betting on the future – you win when you bet on what other people think will happen in the future. The Kids also happen to know, more than any other generation, that technology is the key to changing what other people think.
The Hertz moment
I actually completely missed the Hertz situation when it first made headlines. I’m sure I saw the articles as I doomscrolled through another day of lockdown. But, as the story is so familiar, I didn’t even bother registering it to my memory. Crypto has been pumping and dumping and re-pumping and re-dumping empty shells of coins for years.
Hertz was especially uninteresting as it followed the classic pump-and-dump scheme, like what might be found on bitcointalk.org in 2013. Today’s decentralized finance (DeFi) token schemes are wrapped up in automated market makers, interoperability and yields, often making it hard to discern whether the shared delusions of the players are giving the tokens value, or if the perceived value of the tokens are creating the shared delusion. To complicate things, there is a third, meta layer: The players are aware they are playing a game and can predict the cycle of their shared delusion. The whole thing is a grotesque ouroboros – all simultaneously feeding itself, and feeding off itself, and birthing itself in some eternal, cyclical, scammy mindf**k.
See also: Taylor Monahan – As We Hunger for Viability, Let’s Stay True to Our Values
Well, maybe not “eternal.” The folks who “ape’d into” the DeFi things this summer had such a finite view, usually minutes or hours rather than months or years. It’s hard to grok how any DeFi thing could survive once the heavily subsidized reward period wore off. Especially if two or three or 10 freshly subsidized DeFi things had launched since. Yet they somehow did … sorta.
It’s even harder to understand how this became a dominating force of 2020 considering the intense individualism and selfishness that it both fuel, and is fueled by. We’ve managed to build thousands of “every man for himself” sub-networks on a sprawling, decentralized, cooperative, consensus network. Luckily, or perhaps unluckily if we value our humanity, decentralized consensus networks don’t care about the morality of the things running on it.
And, as much as they continue to fight me on it, I remain convinced that these half-baked farming games are unsustainable in the same way initial coin offerings (ICOs) are unsustainable, in the same way hacked smart contracts are catastrophic, in the same way the money printer cannot go BRRRRRR forever and in the same way the serpent cannot devour itself in perpetuity.
Better system?
Bitcoin has seemingly solidified its place as an alternative, though still slightly experimental, store of value. I would talk more on this but literally everyone is talking about it and I have nothing original to add. I will admit I was wrong in 2015 and 2016 and 2017 when I said the digital gold narrative will never be more valuable than the digital cash one. Any narrative that becomes truth is more valuable than the narrative that fades from memory.
I do wonder what will ultimately become of our historically most persistent narrative, that we are creating a better world. Have we made real progress on banking the unbanked, unbanking the banked, breaking down borders and removing power from repressive regimes and corrupt cabals?
For me, crypto is a worthwhile endeavor because it can provide a viable alternative to the existing systems. Crypto can give people the gift of choice. And with that choice we can opt into the systems that benefit us and opt out of the ones that oppress us.
This is valuable as we all strive to be, well, valuable. We want to be worth something and, as social creatures, to know that we are worth something. We want our existence to matter. How this manifests varies greatly across time and place. How you measure your value determines how you pursue value; both are shaped by the culture of the society in which we exist.
Today, in the West, we often measure ourselves by our salary: This person has deemed my worth to society to be this many dollars, therefore I am. We carry this in us and it muddles everything up and causes us to see worthless, expensive things as more valuable than worthwhile things. In other places or times, you may measure your worth by the animals you hunt or your ability to bear children, or your ability to be born into one life and level up into an entirely better life.
When we have no choice or control over our own worth, we have no motivation to attempt to increase our worth. We are oppressed. Choice in itself does not satisfy our desires, though. It simply gives us the autonomy, and therefore the motivation, to pursue what we desire.
See also: CoinDesk’s Year in Review 2020
Between the diminishing returns on truth, the ever-increasing individualism, and our submissiveness to life’s cycles, I wonder if this system will ever be a “better system” or just “a system that better serves me?”
This is important. In one, we aim to remove the system’s very ability to have a 1%. We attempt to break the cycle of oppression. We create systems to humanize any and all participants and prevent ourselves, the early adopters, the influencers and the Believers, from gaining power on the backs of others.
In the other, we simply shift the power from the oppressors of today to the oppressors of tomorrow. The oppressed devour the oppressors. The oppressors are reborn as the oppressed. The cycle continues. And then, one day, some kids show up and it is the Crypto Believers who this time must shout, “Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.”
Market
House Approves $2,000 Direct Payments in COVID-19 Stimulus Payouts, Looks to Senate to Vote
Published
6 Stunden agoon
Dezember 29, 2020By
There is a possibility that the Senate Republicans may want to hold onto their conservative approach in increased spending citing longer-term consequences.
The United States House of Representatives passed the votes to support the issuance of $2,000 in stimulus checks to American households or beneficiaries, with expectations from the Senate to also sign off on the higher payments. According to a report from Newsweek, the vote from the House came a day after President Donald Trump signed off the COVID-19 stimulus bill with a $600 direct payment to Americans and his unusual demand to raise the payments calling the initial proposal a “Disgrace.”
The second batch of the COVID-19 relief funds which has been marred by months of negotiation impasse over differences in the budget from both the Republicans and the Democrats in the House and Senate respectively finally saw the consent of the lawmakers and the president who recognized the need to support American families during this holidays season. The President’s proposal to boost the payments has been well received by the Democrats and marked by a 275-134 vote in the House, beating the two-third majority required to pass the bill.
Speaking ahead of the House signing off on the deal, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi noted that “the president of the United States has put this forth as something that he wants to see and part of his signing the legislation yesterday. I hope that view will be shared by the Republicans in the Senate, because we will pass this bill today.” “Republicans have a choice: vote for this legislation or vote to deny the American people the bigger paychecks this need. To reject this would be in denial of the economic challenges that people are facing and it would deny them, again, the relief they need,” added she.
Will the Senate Object to the House Ratified Higher COVID-19 Payments?
From the longer-term dispositions of the Republican-controlled Senate as seen in the months of negotiations for this new paycheck, many believe that there is a possibility that the Senate Republicans may want to hold onto their conservative approach in increased spending citing longer-term consequences.
However, many expect that a move in opposition to the higher payments will be a direct affront to the American people who needed these funds more than ever, and also to the president who is in his last days in office, barring any new developments in his attempts to overturn the results of the November 3rd Presidential elections.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., however, has noted he would force the chamber to take up the measure Tuesday but only one senator would need to object to block the bill from passing.
“Following the strong bipartisan vote in the House, tomorrow I will move to pass the legislation in the Senate to quickly deliver Americans with $2,000 emergency checks,” Schumer said in a statement Monday. “Every Senate Democrat is for this much-needed increase in emergency financial relief, which can be approved tomorrow if no Republican blocks it – there is no good reason for Senate Republicans to stand in the way.”
next Market News, News, Personal Finance
Benjamin Godfrey is a blockchain enthusiast and journalists who relish writing about the real life applications of blockchain technology and innovations to drive general acceptance and worldwide integration of the emerging technology. His desires to educate people about cryptocurrencies inspires his contributions to renowned blockchain based media and sites. Benjamin Godfrey is a lover of sports and agriculture.
You have successfully joined our subscriber list.
Altcoin Rally Dimming Bitcoin’s Shine, Polkadot Gains 34% in One Week
Altcoin Rally Dimming Bitcoin’s Shine, Polkadot Gains 34% in One Week
Here’s What History Says To Expect From Bitcoin In 2021
Trending
-
Bitcoin4 Monaten agoBitcoin and cryptocurrency are no hedge for inflation
-
Regulation3 Monaten agoCongress weighs crypto payments and fintech lending in hearing today
-
Bitcoin3 Monaten agoMicroStrategy CEO seems to embrace Bitcoin maximalism
-
Altcoin3 Monaten agoDfinance: Layer 2 Blockchain Network
-
Cryptocurrency4 Monaten agoBank of England is Planing to Adopt Digital Currency
-
Monero9 Monaten agoSophisticated Mining Botnet Identified After 2 Years
-
Market4 Monaten ago
The request could not be satisfied
-
Blockchain3 Monaten agoThe US is number one…in blockchain patents

