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If you own Treasuries, TIPS, or a well-diversified bond portfolio, you already know what safety looks like: steady income, predictable maturity dates, and the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.
Stablecoins? They’re a different animal.
A stablecoin is a digital token pegged to the U.S. dollar and usually backed by assets like Treasury bills. It can be transferred instantly worldwide, which sounds great — until you remember there’s no FDIC insurance, no government guarantee, and no regulator standing behind it in a crisis. If the issuer gets into trouble, you’re just another unsecured creditor waiting in line.
Here’s the real kicker for investors:
Those Treasury bills or other safe assets backing the stablecoin generate interest — but the yield goes to the issuer, not to the holder.
In exchange, the holder gets a dollar-pegged token that depends entirely on the issuer’s operational competence and integrity.
Yes, stablecoins can make sense for crypto traders or businesses that need instant settlement. But for us individual investors — especially those already holding Treasuries or TIPS — the benefit is thin. We already have:
So if someone is tempted to move part of their bond portfolio into stablecoins because they sound “modern” or “efficient,” remember: they’d be giving up a government guarantee and a real yield for a digital promise and no interest.
When it comes to safety, I’ll take my boring ladder of Treasuries and TIPS over a shiny token any day.
Sharing a rather worrying article from the NYT on stablecoins. (I notice that my iPad’s spellcheck doesn’t think stablecoin is a word.)
Good article Kathy. Banks, retailers, and even the president creating their own currency….
I agree, but confess to a degree of ignorance regarding this funny money. Every single person I know who owns digital currency has the idea that they might get rich quick. However, what happens to this get rich quick motive if a stablecoin’s value is tied to the dollar?
Also, if those with a legitimate use for digital currency switch to stablecoin, what effect will the sell-off have on the value of digital currency (like bitcoin) not tied to the dollar?
Dan, I’m not an expert on crypto either but I think you have the right idea. For a USA citizen, living in the USA, and conducting business in the USA, I don’t think a stablecoin based on the USA dollar is needed at all. Any bank or brokerage account allows us to save USA dollars. Since a USA dollar based stablecoin is tied to the dollar, there’s really no capital appreciation aspect. But if you’re a citizen of a foreign country and you want to save money in USA dollars, then that stablecoin might allow you to do so in a much safer manner than trying to acquire and hold USA paper currency. And if you’re country is experiencing high inflation like Eqypt or Argentina, then you’d really like a stable place to store your money. Bitcoin is another matter entirely and is a speculative investment since it’s value is constantly changing. Although Bitcoin can be used to buy something so there is some overlap, I mostly see stablecoins and bitcoin serving 2 very different needs. I could be wrong, but that’s how I see it. Gene