The 3 Main Types (and Why You Should Care)
- Fiat-collateralized (e.g., USDT, USDC): A company issues the stablecoin and promises 1:1 reserves and refunds.
- Crypto-collateralized (e.g., DAI): Reserves are held in cryptocurrency with over-collateralization and automated mechanisms.
- Algorithmic: These maintain their peg using incentives and market mechanisms. This type carries a significantly higher risk.
Real Risks to Understand Before Using Them
- Depegging: The stablecoin’s value can drop below $1 (sometimes for hours or days) when the market panics.
- Issuer Risk: If the issuer has legal or financial problems, getting a refund can become complicated.
- Chain Risk: The same stablecoin on different blockchains is not “the same” (due to bridges, smart contracts, and network congestion).
- Exchange Risk: If you leave the stablecoin on an exchange, the risk isn’t the stablecoin itself, but rather the exchange’s custody practices.
USDT vs USDC vs DAI: How to Choose in Practice
- USDT: Enormous liquidity and multi-chain presence. Suitable for trading and speed, but requires trust in the issuer and its reserves.
- USDC: Often preferred in more “compliance-oriented” contexts. Generally considered more reliable for partners and payments.
- DAI: Useful if you want to avoid a centralized issuer, but it depends on cryptocurrency collateral and DeFi governance.
Related reading: Bitcoin Market Cycles: The Complete Guide to Every Phase · On-chain analysis: a guide to understanding the crypto market.