Stablecoins, designed to maintain a peg with a fiat currency, have become a key pillar of the crypto economy. From being used for remittances to providing safe havens during periods of high volatility, the total stablecoin supply on Ethereum has reached over $70 billion.
Market Cap dominance by stablecoin type as of August 30, 2023.
Daily token holder dispersion (between October 2020 and August 30)
There are three main types of stablecoins:
This primer focuses on over-collateralized stablecoins. We will provide an overview of the biggest over-collateralized stablecoins, compare their differing methods and collateral, and discuss their defining moments.
Market Cap dominance by stablecoin type (as of August 30, 2023).
In addition to how stablecoins are categorized, there are some other important characteristics to consider when evaluating these digital assets.
Market Cap dominance for over-collateralized stablecoins as of August 30, 2023.
Market Cap for over-collateralized stablecoins as of August 30, 2023.
The over-collateralized stablecoin marketplace is heavily weighted towards DAI, which boasts over 79% of the market capitalization. With 13% of the market share between them, eUSD and LUSD also hold significant shares of the space, while crvUSD rounds out the significant tokens with a 2.5% market share.
Over-collateralized stablecoin prices for select tokens from October 2020 to August 30, 2023.
Given the massive amount of backing for fiat-backed tokens, overcollateralized stablecoins only hold around 4% of the global stablecoin market. In addition, the underlying token volatility backing these stablecoins can lead to larger price fluctuations. LUSD has had several extremely large depegs over the past few years, while DAI has remained fairly stable, even through the extreme volatility over the past two years. During these conditions, UST managed to capsize several stablecoins, and troubles in traditional banking including the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank led to multiple arbitrage opportunities for fiat-backed stablecoins such as USDC and USDT.
Spot trading volume market share for over-collateralized stablecoin select tokens from October 2020 to August 30, 2023
DAI is most used within DeFi, but the token has been supported on a number of centralized exchanges for some time. Over-collateralized stablecoins like LUSD and sUSD have either failed to find centralized exchange support due to their volatility and lack of transparency or have not become popular with CEX traders, who trade mostly using USDT and USDC. DAI, however, has had a 95% CEX market share for over-collateralized stablecoins since well before October 2020.
Daily number of holders for over-collateralized stablecoins on select tokens from October 2020 to August 30, 2023
Daily token holders for DAI far outpace any of its stablecoin counterparts. sUSD and mUSD have been adopted by some, but it appears many overcollateralized tokens are still specialized in some ways.
Daily holders dispersion of over-collateralized stablecoins on select tokens from October 2020 to August 30, 2023
Daily token holders have been fairly stable for the last few years for all stablecoins except DAI, which grew quickly in 2021. It appears the challenge for f stablecoins backed by fiat currency to onboard new users also exists for over-collateralized stablecoins. It is important to track user adoption over time as regulatory clarity emerges. This trend could be the catalyst for wider cryptocurrency adoption if users start to onboard through stablecoins rather than more volatile tokens.
Symbol |
Name |
Supported Networks |
Blacklist |
Gasless |
DAI |
Dai |
Ethereum, Polygon, Kava, BNB Chain, Arbitrum, Polygon, Optimism, Metis, Harmony, Avalanche, Sora, Fantom, Moonriver, etc. |
✅ |
✅ |
crvUSD |
Curve USD |
Ethereum |
❌ |
✅ |
LUSD |
Liquity USD |
Ethereum, Arbitrum, Polygon, Optimism |
❌ |
❌ |
sUSD |
Synthetix USD |
Ethereum, Arbitrum, Optimism, Fantom |
❌ |
✅ |
mUSD |
mStable USD |
Polygon and Optimism |
❌ |
✅ |
MIM |
Magic Internet Money |
Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Polygon, BNB Chain, Fantom, Kava, Lindea |
❌ |
❌ |
RSV |
Reserve |
Ethereum |
❌ |
✅ |
eUSD |
Electronic Dollar |
Ethereum and MobileCoin |
❌ |
❌ |
DOLA |
Dola Stablecoin |
Ethereum, Arbitrum, BNB Chain, and Optimism |
❌ |
✅ |
BOB |
BOB Stablecoin |
Ethereum, Polygon, and Optimism |
✅ |
✅ |
MAI |
miMatic |
Ethereum, Polygon, Kava, BNB Chain, Arbitrum, Polygon, Optimism, Solana, Avalanche, Moonriver, etc. |
❌ |
✅ |
USX |
dForce USD |
Ethereum, Arbitrum, BNB Chain, Avalanche, and Optimism |
❌ |
✅ |
HAY |
Destablecoin HAY |
BNB Chain |
Unclear |
Unclear |
XAI |
XAI Stablecoin |
Ethereum |
❌ |
✅ |
USDX |
USDX |
Kava |
Unclear |
Unclear |
DAI market cap since October 2020
DAI mints and burns since January 2020
Dai (DAI) was launched by MakerDAO in December 2017 with a single token for collateral: ETH. In November 2019, this was expanded to include BAT and USDC, the fiat-backed USD stablecoin, but MakerDAO now allows several cryptocurrencies to be used as collateral. New Dai tokens are created (or borrowed) when users deposit collateral assets into Maker vaults. This allows users to mint new Dai tokens and access shared liquidity pools.
Dai tokens can be staked through the Dai Savings Rate (DSR) protocol and earn yield through MakerDAO. MakerDAO is governed by the MKR token, which empowers token holders to create and vote on proposals. In May 2023, the DAO voted to increase the DSR from 1% to 3.33%. The DSR was again raised in July 2023 to as high as 8%. The DSR also introduced the Enhanced Dai Savings Rate (EDSR) which allows the effective DSR to be determined by the DSR utilization rate, which decreases the effective yield on staked Dai as DSR utilization increases.
MakerDAO is an active DAO with a lot of community participation, which shows how incentives can influence adoption. Following the July 2023 proposal, MakerDAO co-founder Rune Christensen noted that “the EDSR helps fix [adoption] by ensuring that Dai holders...get a more fair amount of value from the increased returns generated by the protocol. In turn this might help spur adoption."
Dai’s peg is primarily maintained through incentives. Users mint, or lock up more collateral for DAI when the peg is above $1, and burn (repay DAI) and unlock collateral when the peg is below $1. Over-collateralization is another mechanism for maintaining the stablecoin peg and ensuring the security of the token. As users are required to deposit more collateral than the value of DAI borrowed, this absorbs some of the crypto market volatility without risking the price stability of the stablecoin.
Over-collateralized tokens’ transparency is managed by smart contracts and can be easily verified on-chain. MakerDAO uses summer.fi (previously Oasis) which allows users to borrow Dai against their vault collateral. This operates much differently than most of the fiat-backed tokens covered in our previous report, which use attestation to verify reserves and require payment processors and jurisdiction-dependent licenses to mint new tokens. Since overcollateralized tokens are often managed on-chain and through decentralized governance schemes such as DAOs, developer preference is an extremely important path to adoption for token issuers.
crvUSD mints and burns since January 2020
Curve USD (crvUSD) was created by Curve Finance (CurveFi). Curve is one of the largest decentralized exchanges in the world and is managed through Curve DAO and the CRV token. CRV allows the CurveFi community to vote on protocol fees, rewards, and development decisions and can act as a booster on yield farming activity.
Although crvUSD was launched offering only ETH, the stablecoin is now crypto collateralized, being backed by a number of different tokens as collateral. Curve DAO has approved several new tokens such as wBTC and wstETH (wrapped-staked-ETH) and may continue to approve new tokens through DAO votes. Similar to other stablecoins covered in this report, users can mint crvUSD by adding new collateral to the Curve pool. This collateral is maintained by liquidations. Users are liquidated when the collateral threshold is breached and reversed when collateral prices improve.
Notably, CurveFi’s CEO Michael Egorov deposited 957 sfrxETH (staked ETH created by Frax) valued at $1.8 million to mint $1 million crvUSD. crvUSD faced a depeg event in August 2023 when the protocol faced an exploit caused by a severe and unexpected vulnerability. This event led to significant fear in the community and caused a situation similar to a bank run, with many users redeeming crvUSD for collateral. The stablecoin only fell by around 0.35%, but the event signaled that even over-collateralized stablecoins have risks despite often having more value in collateral than issued tokens.
Learn more about becoming an over-collateralized stablecoin maxi as this is just a subset of the report. In the rest of the report, we go through many more stablecoins including Liquity USD (LUSD), Synthetix USD (sUSD), mStable USD (mUSD), Magic Internet Money (MIM), Reserve (RSV), Electronic Dollar (eUSD), Dola Stablecoin (DOLA), BOB Stablecoin (BOB), miMatic (MAI), and many more.
Download the complete research report here: