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How does a 9.3% savings account sound?

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  • Originally posted by Tangler

    This makes sense.

    The “new magic thing argument” makes less sense.

    At least to me.

    If it paid 0.5% or 1% I might find it comparable to a high yield online savings, but 10%?

    Again, i might be wrong but that is ok.

    I will take my risk in the form of stock index funds and a small value tilt.
    you are quoting a post by someone that doesn't understand how these overcollateralized loans and is therefore making incorrect assumptions

    there is no "magic" argument. the fundamentals have been spelled out.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Tim

      This is helpful. By stablecoins and keeping some savings. Does that mean you would keep a house down payment there? An alternative investment for returns is one thing, my question is more about the word being used, stable.
      well, these tokens literally are stable. go look at a price chart of USDC, GUSD, USDT. they oscillate around $1.00 with a deviation on the y axis at fractions of a penny.

      here is some reading if you'd like a gov perspective https://home.treasury.gov/system/fil...t_Nov1_508.pdf

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Tim

        This is helpful. By stablecoins and keeping some savings. Does that mean you would keep a house down payment there? An alternative investment for returns is one thing, my question is more about the word being used, stable.
        The reason GUSD and USDC are considered the most stable is they have 1:1 backing of USD in their Treasury. So the risk you are taking is not in the stablecoin losing value necessarily, but in the company going under, which is a possibility, sure, but for me a very low probability currently.

        Like I said, I wouldn't put all your savings in there, just in case some black swan even occurs, since there is no FDIC insurance on these platforms. I put 1/3 of total cash savings in stables, with the remainder of my cash reserves in muni bonds & cash.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by xraygoggles

          The reason GUSD and USDC are considered the most stable is they have 1:1 backing of USD in their Treasury. So the risk you are taking is not in the stablecoin losing value necessarily, but in the company going under, which is a possibility, sure, but for me a very low probability currently.

          Like I said, I wouldn't put all your savings in there, just in case some black swan even occurs, since there is no FDIC insurance on these platforms. I put 1/3 of total cash savings in stables, with the remainder of my cash reserves in muni bonds & cash.
          I think the platform risk is far higher than the risk of the underlying capital backing of the stablecoin. platform would include blockfi, celsius or whatever that you're interacting with, plus the blockchain platform the stablecoin is built upon. for instance GUSD is an ERC-20 token, on the ethereum chain

          Comment


          • Originally posted by jacoavlu

            I think the platform risk is far higher than the risk of the underlying capital backing of the stablecoin. platform would include blockfi, celsius or whatever that you're interacting with, plus the blockchain platform the stablecoin is built upon. for instance GUSD is an ERC-20 token, on the ethereum chain
            Right - platform risk, that's what I said. If Coinbase or Gemini goes under, you are screwed. But I consider that unlikely.

            ERC-20 protocol is basically what almost every single DeFi token and stablecoin is built on, so again, highly unlikely to implode. Network effects, etc.

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            • Originally posted by xraygoggles

              Right - platform risk, that's what I said. If Coinbase or Gemini goes under, you are screwed. But I consider that unlikely.

              ERC-20 protocol is basically what almost every single DeFi token and stablecoin is built on, so again, highly unlikely to implode. Network effects, etc.
              yes, i didn't mean to imply that you had stated otherwise. moreso clarifying for others reading

              Comment


              • Originally posted by jacoavlu

                you are quoting a post by someone that doesn't understand how these overcollateralized loans and is therefore making incorrect assumptions

                there is no "magic" argument. the fundamentals have been spelled out.
                Ok, no offense intended, just seems like magic to me.

                I am one of the ignorant no-coiners.

                Happy thanksgiving!

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Tangler

                  Ok, no offense intended, just seems like magic to me.

                  I am one of the ignorant no-coiners.

                  Happy thanksgiving!
                  no offense taken

                  the third and most famous of Arthur Clarke’s laws is: any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic



                  Comment


                  • Which is a safer way to get yield? Tax free state specific CEF which has an after tax yield of 6%. Or crypto interest account with an after tax yield of 5.45%. The CEF fund uses leverage of around 30% and has an ER = 1.6 but is trading at an 8% discount to NAV.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by ShredtheGnar
                      Which is a safer way to get yield? Tax free state specific CEF which has an after tax yield of 6%. Or crypto interest account with an after tax yield of 5.45%. The CEF fund uses leverage of around 30% and has an ER = 1.6 but is trading at an 8% discount to NAV.
                      anyone would be guessing.

                      the state specific fund would probably me more risk of a near term mild to moderate drawdown / underperformance

                      stablecoin interest account would be more risk of some catastrophe of total loss / locked funds

                      Comment


                      • TLDR: No, but it has different risks Disclaimer: I have short positions on COIN, which partly owns Circle. Following my piece on tether (USDT), some people have advanced that a similar stablecoin, …


                        An interesting article about USDC in comparison to Tether. TL-- but still recommend reading-- USDC is not as bad as tether, but still opaque in their treasury holdings. This was written in July...

                        I know- another piece of FUD- I just think it's important to understand that stablecoins aren't riskless. Yields are high to attract inflows.

                        (I don't hold stablecoins, FWIW. If I'm going to lose my dirty fiat in crypto, its going to be the old fashioned way with BTC going to near zero and panic selling).

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Brains428
                          https://www.singlelunch.com/2021/07/...nother-tether/

                          An interesting article about USDC in comparison to Tether. TL-- but still recommend reading-- USDC is not as bad as tether, but still opaque in their treasury holdings. This was written in July...

                          I know- another piece of FUD- I just think it's important to understand that stablecoins aren't riskless. Yields are high to attract inflows.

                          (I don't hold stablecoins, FWIW. If I'm going to lose my dirty fiat in crypto, its going to be the old fashioned way with BTC going to near zero and panic selling).
                          tether recently had a pretty significant drawdown locally in india given some speculation about possible ban coming down from their gov. was trading at a discount for like half a day. of course there were folks happy to take the other side for the arb opportunity

                          Comment




                          • Here is an add on to the criticism of stablecoins in general (mostly pointed at Tether, but USDC is mentioned in the last paragraph). It's written by bitfinexed- which mostly focuses on Tether and the potential fraud around it. There is adult language in this article.

                            USDC allowed an audit of their funds in late 2020, but has simply had attestations of their backing this year.

                            Comment


                            • So how safe/stable is this?

                              For the interest arbitrage how much is someone willing to borrow at a lower percent to put into this to earn 8-10% or whatever it is?

                              If one believes in this and has cash laying around then it seems like people are earning interest like this.

                              Would you borrow money at 1% to earn 10%? Borrow at 2%? Where does one draw the line?

                              Comment


                              • WCICON24 EarlyBird
                                Originally posted by Nysoz
                                So how safe/stable is this?

                                For the interest arbitrage how much is someone willing to borrow at a lower percent to put into this to earn 8-10% or whatever it is?

                                If one believes in this and has cash laying around then it seems like people are earning interest like this.

                                Would you borrow money at 1% to earn 10%? Borrow at 2%? Where does one draw the line?
                                I have my emergency fund in GUSD, not locked, earning 8%. I wouldn’t borrow money to buy stable coins just to earn interest

                                Comment

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