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Stablecoin Evaluation Framework: Three Pillars and Six Key Indicators
The essence of a stablecoin is a value exchange tool, with its core value lying in maintaining "stability." Evaluation should focus on "credibility" and "usability," rather than investment returns.
Pillar One: Credibility (Will it have problems?)
This is the fundamental factor that determines the "life or death" of a stablecoin.
Reserves and Transparency
Asset Composition: Prefer stablecoins backed primarily by cash and short-term U.S. Treasury bonds, due to their highest liquidity and credit ratings. Be cautious with other assets (such as commercial paper, corporate bonds, etc.). For crypto-collateralized stablecoins, pay attention to their over-collateralization ratio and collateral quality.
Audits and Proofs: Issuers must undergo regular, public audits conducted by top-tier independent accounting firms (such as Deloitte, Ernst & Young). Reports should detail reserve holdings, ensuring reserve value fully matches circulating market cap.
Redemption Mechanism: Is there a clear, reliable fiat redemption channel? Can the issuer guarantee redemption at a 1:1 ratio at any time? This is the final safeguard for maintaining the peg.
Issuance Entity and Governance
Issuer Credibility: Does the issuing organization have a good track record, strong financial backing, and is it regulated by financial authorities in its main operational regions?
Decentralization of Governance: For decentralized stablecoins, are upgrades to smart contracts and modifications of key parameters (such as interest rates, collateral ratios) managed by a broad, transparent decentralized community governance? Or controlled by a few anonymous developers? Centralized control implies a single point of failure risk.
Pillar Two: Stability (Can it stay stable?)
This is the core promise of a stablecoin, needing validation through historical stress tests.
Historical Pegging Record
Stress Testing: Observe how the stablecoin performed during past market shocks (such as Terra collapse, banking crises, regulatory shocks). Did its price deviate significantly from $1 (e.g., below 0.99 or above 1.01)? How long did it take to recover?
Price Volatility: Review long-term price charts, calculating average and maximum deviations from the $1 peg.
Market Depth and Liquidity
Trading Volume: High daily trading volume indicates sufficient liquidity, preventing large trades from significantly impacting the price.
Bid-Ask Spread: On major spot trading pairs, a smaller difference between buy and sell prices indicates a healthier market and lower exchange costs.
Pillar Three: Practicality and Network Effects (Is it user-friendly?)
This is the foundation for the long-term survival of a stablecoin.
Adoption and Integration
Market Cap: A larger market cap generally indicates stronger network effects and higher acceptance within the ecosystem.
Ecosystem Support: Is it widely supported by mainstream exchanges, wallets, DeFi protocols, and payment providers? Is there broad circulation on blockchains beyond Ethereum (such as Solana, Arbitrum)?
Technical Security
Smart Contract Audits: Has the code been thoroughly audited by multiple top security firms? Have there been any major security vulnerabilities or hacking incidents in the past?
Upgrade and Emergency Mechanisms: Does the protocol have pause mechanisms to handle extreme situations? Are upgrade processes secure and transparent?
Conclusion: A Simple Evaluation Process
Preferred Type: For most users, stablecoins backed 100% by high transparency, high-quality assets pose the lowest risk.
Check Audit Reports: If there are no publicly available, regular reserve proofs issued by top institutions, the project should be rejected outright.
Review Past Stress Events: Examine its price charts during previous crises—these are the most authentic "stress tests."
Observe Market Depth: Check trading pairs on commonly used exchanges to ensure smooth trading and minimal spreads.
The "investment value" of a stablecoin lies in its ability to remain credible, stable, and usable during crises. Choosing projects that demonstrate the strongest resilience across these six dimensions is the best way to manage risk.