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How on earth is it possible they can cover a 1.5B loss?

Easy! They give Binance an IOU in exchange for 1.5 billion BUSD which is just "minted" out of fresh new electrons. Neither of them has really lost anything. Everyone can carry on as if it never happened.

In the bizarro world of crypto, this is business as usual.



Binance doesn't mint BUSD, BUSD is emitted by Paxos, which is an american licensed company.


I have a license to drive a car. Having it doesn't limit my ability to mint crypto.


https://www.dfs.ny.gov/consumers/alerts/Paxos_and_Binance

It was approved by the New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS).


From your reference:

      The Department has not authorized Binance-Peg BUSD on any blockchain, and Binance-Peg BUSD is not issued by Paxos. 
If you insist, feel free to replace BUSD with an unregulated "stable coin" of your choice. How about FDUSD?


The sentence right before says "It is important to note that the Department authorized Paxos to issue BUSD on the Ethereum blockchain."

As far as I know Binance ended the Binance-pegged BUSD (the BNB chain version bridged from ethereum) without any problem or holder loss?


Gary Gensler called BUSD a security and banned it years go. What a guy!


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Yes we definitely should have left all the sector unregulated or else how would we make a profit?


They didn't regulate the crypto industry. They told everyone to stop and then refused to provide regulations or guidance on acceptable behavior despite continual begging by coinbase et al. to be allowed to cooperate.


I never said that it should be unregulated, just that the sanction applied to BUSD had a political motive. Of course stablecoins are not securities, just like a 20$ note isn't a security.


The analogy to cash feels a bit strained. There's a difference in backing, don't you think?


I was referring to the Howey test, that is used to determine if an asset is a security: https://www.findlaw.com/consumer/securities-law/what-is-the-...


How it it different from what banks do? (Except for a central regulator.)


How it it different from what banks do? (Except for a central regulator.)

Your exception is the answer.

Only the central regulator can "mint" money and doing so has real world consequences. The central regulator has financial incentives to limit this sort of activity.

The bizarro world of crypto has no such regulation and as a result, it is inherently unstable.

The proof of this is right in front of you --- it is the fact that "stable coins" exist. The only way to bring stability to the bizarro world of crypto is by tying it to "fiat" --- which is the very thing crypto is supposedly working to eliminate.

Contradict and hypocrite much?


I saw a quote somewhere:

>Crypto is speedrunning the entire evolution of finance to end up at the same place


I saw a quote somewhere:

    Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
The only thing new about crypto is paper has been replaced by electrons.

Individuals/banks minting their own money has been tried before. It didn't go well.


However, this quote is usually intended to be a warning, not an opportunity to run all the old scams again.

These people hear it and think "You mean we get to repeat history?!"


It’s not an uncommon joke about how easy it would be to be a serial killer or bank robber in “the olden days” - just need to move 1 town over and you can do it all again which has a strong similarity to being able to commit crypto crimes with hardly a consequence by virtue of doing it across jurisdictions..


I sure hope we don't end up in the same place where the monetary system is only being held up by the fact that there is more debt than money creating an endless competition for the limited quantity of money that exists in order to pay off ever-increasing debts and expenses with a currency that is continually debased throughout the process.


We're already there. That's called "going to the moon". That's the end state. Get in, ride the rise, and then sell out and tell others to "buy the dip".


We crossed that point years ago. It's the stablecoins that hold all the debt and use it to back their "dollars."


They are being loaned ETH to cover withdrawals and prevent what would amount to a bank run, not stablecoins. This entire comment chain is stupid and pointless.


False. Money on your bank account is backed by bank's assets, not by the central regulator. Recommended reading: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional-reserve_banking , M1 money supply, etc.

> The only way to bring stability to the bizarro world of crypto is by tying it to "fiat"

False. It's possible to make stable-coins using just price oracle and collateral. "Fiat" is not necessary. E.g. https://www.liquity.org/bold


> False. Money on your bank account is backed by bank's assets, not by the central regulator. Recommended reading: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional-reserve_banking , M1 money supply, etc.

You didn't even finish reading the first paragraph.

> Bank reserves are held as cash in the bank or as balances in the bank's account at the central bank

The collapse of svb shows how much the central regulator cares about making sure the entire banking system doesn't fall apart, too.

With the way you remarked "false" at the OP, though, I don't expect you're here for an engaging and educational discussion, so I'll leave it here. lol


Regarding fractional reserves...

https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/mone...

>the Board has reduced reserve requirement ratios to zero percent effective on March 26, the beginning of the next reserve maintenance period. This action eliminates reserve requirements for thousands of depository institutions and will help to support lending to households and businesses.


It's possible to make stable-coins using just price oracle and collateral.

Most attempts at "algorithmic" stable coins have failed. See TerraDollar, Luna and Titan.


Over-collateralized stables are different from "algorithmic": the algorithmic ones are not fully backed by reserves.


They are very capital inefficient and still can fail during black swan events.


the algorithmic ones are not fully backed by reserves.

And you just know that the "collaterized" ones are? In most cases, their books aren't open. And they wouldn't lie about this would they?

In some strange way, the crypto brain has been programmed to ignore the obvious with a hand wave and just accept all the chicanery that is crypto.


I gave you Liquity as an example. They don't have "books", it's a smart contract which takes ETH as a collateral and lets ppl to borrow LUSD against it.

Maker initially worked same way, but eventually they started accepting off-chain collateral.


Because while banks hold duration, the net value of their current assets, future asset streams, and equity is above zero. Indeed the core focus of the business and regulatory side is ensuring this is so.

The central regulator caveat is also a huge caveat to brush aside. During the last round of systemic stress, the banking system essentially got a guarantee that all uninsured deposits would be protected, and banks were allowed to post their collateral for liquidity at terms that no other business has access to.

What OP is referencing is the oft-seen practice in the crypto space where failed entities fill an asset hole with propped up tokens, essentially transforming their paper loss on the balance sheet into liquidity risk that doesn't show as readily.

The important point here is that in the latter case, the entity may be fully insolvent, even after accounting for future cashflows on loans. When it comes to banks, even the left tail cases like SVB, their "problem assets" are things like long term treasuries, which are way down the risk curve when compared to the ponzi-tokenonics style "stablecoins" that we've seen unwind over the past few years.


> How it it different from what banks do?

I often read this sort of comment from crypto-defenders, but is it what banks do?

I’m relatively naive about these things, but my impression is that a bank losing this proportion of their assets can’t just ‘pretend’ they have the money, or create ‘new’ money.


That's because they're mistaken. In traditional banking only the central authority can print money, not the individual banks.

If someone stole a trillion dollars from JP Morgan, JP Morgan can't make themselves whole by creating a new trillion dollars.

The central authority might guarantee the customers of JP Morgan that their money is protected, but they won't print money to make the bank whole.


That's one model/theory for how modern money creation works.

Another is modern monetary theory (MMT), and in that, commercial banks are indeed the primary creators of money, with the central bank playing a technically more passive role.

Still, in either model of money creation (i.e. classical "money multiplier" and MMT), governmental regulators (which can be the central bank or others) do ultimately control the rate of money creation via various mechanisms.



Banks create money by issuing loans; but they can't create money out of thin air if $1.5B was stolen from them.


Banks create credit within the confines of law. That isn't creating money. Only the central bank can do that


Banks don't print money for each other, and if they get money for free it's backstopped by the government and hence all of us. Crypto wants this single aspect but none of the central regulation.

Both systems stink for those at the end of the chain, i.e. us; you can decide which one is worse.


Banks borrow from each other all the time. What do you think "overnight loans" is for? And when banks gives a loan that creates money


FEDS can print money while Binance does not


not exactly true - Binance is indeed "printing money", just with no centralized regulation. When the Feds do it the expectation is that they are aware of the long-term impacts of doing so, and include in their calculation. For crypto it's the opposite: do it before you erode trust & goodwill to the point where it's no longer valuable. I see it more like it is very different than printing money in a economy that's perceived as stable and quite similar to printing money in one where the people have no faith in the value of sovereign currency. So the crypo-promoters are right about the use-case in certain jurisdictions, but the problem is that's not where the wealth is, so they target rich economies that tend to have stable government currencies & established banking, and do not need crypto for legitimate tasks.


I doubt they can because they peg it to USD, do you think they can pay aws bill with busd??? maybe you can but people with busd would convert it to usd at some point




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