Tether Edges Closer to Reclaiming $1 Peg

After hitting lows of $0.95, a scenario not seen in more than two years, Tether (USDT) has gained momentum as it edges closer to the $1 peg.

The largest stablecoin was up by 4.34% in the last 24 hours to hit $0.998 during intraday trading, according to CoinMarketCap.

 

Market insight provider Santiment noted:

“Tether lost its $1 peg to start Thursday’s trading, dropping to $0.95 for the first time since March, 2020. The world’s largest stablecoin is speculated to be impacted by the LUNA and UST crashes. USDT social volume has now hit a 17-month high.”

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Source:Santiment

 

The spillover effect of the Terra crash was a primary factor in Tether’s high liquidation, given that even whale addresses increased selling pressure. Santiment acknowledged:

“In case there was any doubt on the seriousness of Tether losing its $1 peg, key whale addresses have dumped a total of $710M in USDT today. This is the largest one-day dump from 100k to 10M USDT addresses in crypto’s largest.”

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Source:Santiment 

 

LUNA, a native token of the Terra network, sent shockwaves to the crypto market after collapsing to nearly zero overnight. 

 

Moreover, TerraUSD (UST), the algorithmic stablecoin on the Terra network, also experienced a free fall to the extent that leading crypto exchange Binance temporarily halted withdrawals. 

 

The UST crash brought stablecoins to the limelight, triggering Tether’s liquidation.  

 

Nevertheless, Tether is different from UST because its value is directly pegged to the US dollar.

 

Ransu Salovaara, the CEO of DeFi platform Likvidi, acknowledged:

“It’s important now to acknowledge that Terra is a so-called algorithmic stablecoin, not directly backed by USD. The most popular stable coins like Tether (USDT) and USDC are actually backed by USD in the bank and both of those survived the market sell-off well.”

Therefore, UST maintains the $1 threshold through code and not a collateral based on its algorithmic nature. 

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