|
Canada-0-Engineering कंपनी निर्देशिकाएँ
|
कंपनी समाचार :
- Stablecoins: A Deep Dive into Valuation and Depegging
Stablecoins aim to maintain a pegged value, but the stability of each stablecoin differs based on the type of collateral it is backed by, or lack thereof Stablecoins are not risk-free and are subject to market volatility, market confidence and adoption, technology risk, demand and supply, and market liquidity
- Meet mUSD: The Dollar That Lives Inside Your MetaMask Wallet
Stablecoins have become the backbone of the crypto economy, bridging the gap between traditional finance and decentralized applications With stablecoins now topping $290 billion in total market cap, the race to win user trust is more intense than ever The newest entrant? MetaMask USD (mUSD), a dollar-pegged stablecoin launched directly by MetaMask, a non-custodial software cryptocurrency wallet
- The Path Forward to RESTORE $USTC A Stabilization Restore Framework for . . .
• Stablecoins (USDT USDC equivalents where possible) • Or BTC ETH exposure This builds a partial collateral ratio over time: 5% → 10% → 20% and beyond 4--Transparent Funding Sources All inflows come through: • A defined percentage of LUNC transaction fees • Small governance-approved share of validator commissions
- Dai price today, DAI to USD live price, marketcap and chart | CoinMarketCap
One such kind of asset are stablecoins, of which DAI is one example These are cryptocurrencies whose price is pegged to assets with a relatively stable value — most commonly traditional fiat currencies, such as USD or EUR
- CFTC Allows Bitcoin, Ether, and Stablecoins as Margin Collateral
Highlights: CFTC says Bitcoin, Ether, and stablecoins can be used as margin collateral under strict rules Bitcoin and Ether face at least a 20% haircut, limiting their full collateral value The first phase allows limited crypto use and requires weekly reporting and risk disclosures The U S Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has issued new guidance that gives Bitcoin a limited
- CFTC staff details how crypto firms can use digital assets as . . .
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) staff released a new FAQ outlining how cryptocurrency firms can use digital assets as derivatives collateral This guidance aligns the CFTC's framework with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)'s recent haircut guidance Specifically, it establishes a 20% charge for bitcoin and ether and a 2% charge for payment stablecoins These
- Snapshot - Explore
Log in to start making decisions See how it works
- Code Over Collateral: The Rise And Risk Of Algorithmic Stablecoins
Code Over Collateral: The Rise And Risk Of Algorithmic Stablecoins In the dynamic world of digital finance, algorithmic stablecoins represent one of the most ambitious and provocative developments
- Crypto Collateral Loans in 2026: LTV Limits and Real Costs Explained
Crypto collateral loans explained for 2026: compare APR ranges, LTV limits, and hidden costs Learn how credit lines like Clapp reduce borrowing costs with pay-as-you-use interest
- JPMorgan’s JPM Coin (JPMD) Deposit Token: It’s Not Just Another Stablecoin!
JPMorgan’s new deposit token, JPMD, brings regulated bank money onto public blockchains Learn how it differs from stablecoins
|
|