The popular stablecoin USDC has regained its $1 peg price after regulators in the US assured that depositors in Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) can access their money today.
The assurance from the government means that all Silicon Valley Bank depositors will be made whole, despite the bank’s collapse and wipeout of investor money. USDC issuer Circle was among the depositors in the bank, and stood to lose approximately $3.3bn in the bank collapse.
Circle’s total reserves for USDC at the time stood at approximately $40bn, but the loss in SVB was still significant enough to cause a temporary de-peg for USDC. On Saturday and Sunday, USDC for long periods traded in the $0.90 to $0.95 area.
As of Monday morning, USDC had regained its peg after Circle promised that all outstanding USDC tokens could still be redeemed for $1, even if the company would need to finance it with external capital.
“[Circle] will stand behind USDC and cover any shortfall using corporate resources, involving external capital if necessary,” the company said in its statement.
Along with the USDC recovery, the decentralized stablecoin DAI, which is partly backed by USDC, also regained ground on Sunday and Monday. The dollar-pegged token fell along with USDC on Saturday to lows around the $0.90 level, but has since traded back up towards the $1 level.
At the time of writing, DAI traded at $0.999, up 3.2% over the past 24 hours, per data from CoinGecko.
The recovery for both stablecoins came about after US regulators on Sunday stepped in and promised that depositors in the bank would get access to all of their funds, despite the closing of the banks. This has helped the market regain confidence in the coins, sending them back up to their $1 peg price as of press time.
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