Reference
Stablecoin glossary
Terms that come up across the site, written so a non-specialist can read them in one pass. Each definition links out to the report where we use the term in context.
A
- Algorithmic stablecoin
- A token that tries to hold a one-dollar peg without holding one dollar of off-chain collateral per coin. Supply is expanded or contracted by code, often using a second "share" token. The Terra USD design that failed in May 2022 is the most famous example. See the primer.
- Attestation
- A short report from an accounting firm confirming that an issuer held certain assets on a specific date. Not the same as a full audit. Tether publishes a quarterly attestation by BDO. Circle publishes a monthly attestation by Deloitte. An attestation tells you a snapshot was checked; it does not commit the firm to a broader opinion on the company's controls.
- Audit (financial)
- A formal opinion from an accounting firm covering the books over a defined period, including the company's internal controls and any material misstatements. As of mid-2026, none of USDT, USDC, FDUSD, TUSD or DAI publish a full financial audit at the same cadence as listed banks. Attestations are common; full audits are not.
B–C
- Binance
- The largest spot crypto exchange by trading volume. Holds the deepest USDT order book on most pairs. StableDesk is a Binance Affiliate partner; full disclosure.
- BUSD
- A US-regulated dollar stablecoin issued by Paxos under contract with Binance. NYDFS ordered Paxos to stop minting new BUSD in February 2023. Existing BUSD wound down over about 18 months; the token is no longer the working dollar inside Binance.
- CFTC
- US Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Has settled enforcement actions against both Tether (2021) and Binance (2023) related to derivatives and reporting.
- Circle
- Issuer of USDC. Headquartered in the US, regulated as a money transmitter by NY DFS and other state regulators. Listed on the NYSE under CRCL in 2024.
- Cross-chain bridge
- A protocol that moves a token between blockchains. Stablecoins use bridges to circulate between Ethereum, Tron, Solana, BNB Chain and others. Bridges have historically been the single largest target for crypto exploits: Ronin, Wormhole, Nomad, Multichain. See the cross-chain report on the Chinese edition for the long version.
D–E
- DAI
- The largest crypto-collateralised stablecoin alive, issued by MakerDAO (now Sky). Backed by a mix of USDC, ETH and real-world assets. From August 2024, MakerDAO rebranded the same token line as USDS, with DAI remaining available.
- Depeg
- An episode where a stablecoin price moves away from the value it is meant to track. The size and duration vary. USDC's SVB weekend depeg in March 2023 lasted about 48 hours; UST's depeg in May 2022 was permanent.
- EURC
- Circle's euro-referenced stablecoin. Compliance positioning shifted significantly after MiCA came into force in mid-2024.
F–H
- FCA
- UK Financial Conduct Authority. Maintains the UK crypto asset registration regime and supervises payment-services rules that touch fiat on-ramps.
- FDUSD
- First Digital USD, issued by First Digital Labs under Hong Kong trust law. Listed in Binance's market structure when BUSD wound down. Hong Kong's stablecoin ordinance (2025) brought FDUSD into a domestic licensing regime.
- FinCEN
- US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. Regulates money services businesses (MSBs) and runs the SARs reporting regime that touches large stablecoin movements.
- FOMC liquidity
- Not a stablecoin term but worth knowing. US short-term interest rates set by the Federal Reserve drive most of the income on T-bill-backed reserves (USDT, USDC, FDUSD, PYUSD). When rates fall, issuer revenue falls; when rates rise, it rises.
- HKMA
- Hong Kong Monetary Authority. Runs the Hong Kong stablecoin licensing regime that came into force in 2025.
I–N
- Issuer
- The legal entity that mints a stablecoin. For USDT this is Tether Limited. For USDC it is Circle Internet Financial. For FDUSD it is First Digital Labs.
- Liquidity
- How easily you can swap a coin for cash or for another asset at a fair price. For USDT, liquidity is deepest on Binance and OKX spot books. For USDC, deepest on Coinbase and Kraken. The depth gap matters during a depeg, when forced selling drains the thinner side first.
- MAS
- Monetary Authority of Singapore. Runs the Payment Services Act regime that licenses major digital payment token services.
- MiCA
- Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation. The EU framework that came fully into force in mid-2024. MiCA's e-money-token rules are why several EU venues phased USDT spot pairs out and EURC stepped up.
- NYAG
- New York Attorney General. Settled an 18.5 million dollar action against Bitfinex and Tether in February 2021. The order produced the first detailed Tether reserve breakdown to reach the public.
- NY DFS
- New York Department of Financial Services. Issues BitLicences and supervises USDC, PYUSD and (formerly) BUSD at the state level.
O–R
- OFAC
- US Office of Foreign Assets Control. Maintains the sanctions list. USDT and USDC freezing of sanctioned addresses operates within OFAC requirements.
- Peg
- The reference value a stablecoin promises to track. For USDT, USDC, DAI, FDUSD and PYUSD: one US dollar. For EURC: one euro. The peg is held by a combination of arbitrage, redemption mechanics and (in the case of fiat-backed coins) the issuer's reserves.
- Proof of Reserves (PoR)
- An exchange's published snapshot of customer assets held against on-chain wallets. Useful but limited: a snapshot does not prove that the assets were not borrowed for the day. PoR is not equivalent to a financial audit.
- Redemption
- The right to send a stablecoin back to its issuer in exchange for dollars. Circle accepts redemptions from approved institutional clients. Tether accepts redemptions over a minimum threshold. Retail holders almost always exit through an exchange instead.
- RWA
- Real-world assets. In the stablecoin context: T-bills, money-market funds, repurchase agreements and similar holdings that sit in the reserve. DAI's RWA exposure has grown significantly under Sky.
S–U
- SEC
- US Securities and Exchange Commission. Has examined whether specific stablecoins qualify as securities and taken enforcement actions touching the category, including the BUSD matter.
- SFC
- Securities and Futures Commission of Hong Kong. Runs the VATP (virtual asset trading platform) licensing regime.
- Stablecoin
- A token designed to hold a stable price reference (usually one US dollar). Four broad families: fiat-backed, crypto-collateralised, algorithmic, commodity-backed. See the primer.
- SVB
- Silicon Valley Bank. Failed in March 2023. Held 3.3 billion dollars of Circle's USDC reserves at the time of failure; the freeze caused the USDC weekend depeg.
- Tether
- Issuer of USDT. Headquartered in the British Virgin Islands. Reserve composition disclosed quarterly via BDO attestation.
- USDC
- Circle's dollar stablecoin. NY DFS-regulated at the state level in the US. Roughly 60 billion supply as of mid-2026.
- USDT
- Tether's dollar stablecoin. The largest stablecoin by supply (roughly 150 billion as of mid-2026) and the dominant unit on most CEX spot books.
V–Z
- VATP
- Virtual asset trading platform. Hong Kong SFC licence category covering retail-facing crypto exchanges.
- Wash trade
- Trading with yourself to inflate apparent volume. Reported volumes on some smaller exchanges include wash activity. StableDesk uses Kaiko-style or DeFiLlama-aggregated venue weighting where possible.
- Yield
- Income earned by lending or staking a stablecoin. USDT and USDC sit in lending markets like Aave and Compound, in Curve pools, in CEX flexible savings products and in newer T-bill-linked vaults. Yields vary with rates and demand; nothing here is risk-free.