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by daveytea
2294 days ago
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> There's no way to instantly convert the stablecoin back into the collateral asset, you have to find someone with a CDP who is willing to buy the stablecoin from you. This is incorrect and actually doesn't make sense. An important part of DeFi are DEXes (decentralised exchanges) such as Uniswap and Kyber. There is a liquidity pool where you can instantly buy/sell assets. There is no 'waiting' to find someone (i.e. no problems with coincidence of wants). You definitely do not need to find someone with a CDP. You can hold DAI without opening a CDP. Contracts can hold DAI (as DEXes do). > Similarly, there's no way to unlock your collateralized asset, you have to find someone who is willing to sell you the stablecoin in order to open up your vault and get your eth out. Also incorrect. You need to pay back the debt of your CDP with DAI. You can do this easily by buying DAI on a DEX, paying back the debt, then releasing your collateral. Some services exist to do this in 1 transaction, so you don't need to actually 'buy' any other asset. You just send the transaction to a contract and they take care of the details. The DeFi, specifically the Ethereum space, has moved very quickly in a short amount of time, so there are a lot of new concepts and instruments out there. I think a more traditional finance person will have trouble understanding it all as in some cases, there are no analogies to the traditional finance system (e.g. flashloans). |
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All "cryptocurrencies" are, in effect, complex securities that are derivatives of greater market factors. The crisis of 2007 showed the risk of using complex investment vehicles that were poorly understood by investors -- and the CDOs that were sold in the mid 00s were far more transparent and predictable than cryptocurrency. Given that crypto will always be one asset class among many, if the traditional finance system (which already operates outside any single fiat currency) can't understand it, they won't use it for anything more than speculation.
Using crypto as an investment vehicle requires a reasonably accurate assessment of risk. In the case of fiat currencies, central banks manage that risk so that investors can rely on the liquidity of the overall system without wiping out deposits. DeFi has no such mechanism, and no central bank to absorb a big hit temporarily in the case of a black swan event.
I still feel that cryptocurrency is just the 21st century version of penny stocks and junk bonds. Fiat currency works because its power as currency is secured by a government able to mobilize military and industrial power to solve market problems. The most heavily traded currencies (RMB, USD, EUR) are those backed by large industrial and military powers because those countries have the scale and political power to manage market risk. Centralized governance is a feature, not a bug.