The aftermath of Terra and Luna’s collapse

Last week, the world watched two of the largest cryptocurrencies, Terra and Luna, collapse in real-time — destroying over $50B in market value within a week. Terra’s creator, Do Kwon, has plans to keep Terra alive — by cloning the network.
Catch up: Destruction of TerraUSD, the third-largest stablecoin
Do Kwon and Terra’s affiliated organizations are facing countless investigations and lawsuits. But Do Kwon isn’t giving up and has given a new proposal to keep Luna alive:
Terra will distribute new to Luna and UST holders before the attack — with a majority of the tokens having a lockup period to ease selling pressure.
Whether there’s any value in the new token and what it’ll focus on remains uncertain.
Since Terra’s implosion, over $4B has flowed into competitor stablecoin USD Coin. Unlike algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD, USDC is an asset-backed stablecoin.
This means: For each in circulation, there should be an equal amount held in a regulated financial institution — which can be redeemed 1-1 by USDC holders. The problem with Terra was that it wasn’t backed by anything.
This brings us to Circle, USDC’s creator, which announced to go public via SPAC Concord Acquisition Corp (NYSE:CND) in 2021.
That made Circle rethink its deal. Earlier this year, Circle made a new deal with Concord that doubles Circle’s valuation to $9B.
But $9B is a considerable number for a company with only $17M in sales during the first quarter of 2021. With its growth since unknown, it’s difficult to say if it will join other fallen fintech and crypto-related stocks if it debuts in the public markets.
What we do know is that USD Coin is catching up fast to the world’s largest stablecoin, Tether.
Since Luna’s collapse, Tether briefly lost its $1 peg, falling to 97 cents as investors took out nearly 10% of its supply (~$9B). This highlighted the risk and controversy surrounding Tether.
At the end of the first quarter, Tether held 14% of its $82B assets in riskier holdings (i.e., corporate debt, funds, commodities, digital currencies).
The risk: It’s like if the bank took your deposits and started buying risky investments and trading stocks… wait a minute…