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Agora, Galaxy complete AUSD stablecoin’s first live transaction

Agora’s AUSD is the latest entrant into the burgeoning stablecoin market.

Asset manager Galaxy and stablecoin issuer Agora completed the first over-the-counter transaction involving AUSD, Agora’s stablecoin, according to a Jan. 8 announcement. 

“This trade marks the transition of AUSD from proof-of-concept to real-world application,” Nick van Eck, Agora’s CEO, said in a statement. 

Agora’s AUSD is the latest stablecoin seeking to capture market share from incumbents, such as Circle’s USD Coin (USDC) and Tether’s USDt (USDT). It joins other relative newcomers such as Ethena’s USDe. 

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Dragonfly-Backed Stablecoin, Agora, to Launch Natively on Sui

Dragonfly-Backed Stablecoin, Agora, to Launch Natively on SuiAgora, a stablecoin company that recently raised $12 million in its Series A funding round led by Dragonfly, has announced that it will launch its AUSD token natively on Sui. The company aims to produce a better stablecoin focusing on emerging markets, and sharing the revenue obtained with partners integrating AUSD in their services platforms. […]

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‘Yield-bearing stables’ are not money or stablecoins: Agora’s van Eck

Yield-bearing stablecoins are far more likely to be classed as security products in many countries and would restrict customer reach, argues the son of Jan van Eck.

Stablecoin issuers that offer a yield-bearing element to give holders passive income are missing the point of a stablecoin’s core mission, argues Nick van Eck, CEO of stablecoin issuer firm Agora.

Instead, these firms should focus on utility, liquidity and means of transaction in a way that reaches as many individuals and businesses as possible, the son of investment management maestro Jan van Eck explained in a May 27 Medium post.

Yield-bearing stablecoins have offered a new dimension for decentralized finance users looking to earn interest, but van Eck says such products will likely be classed as security products in many countries and, therefore, restrict customer reach.

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Acala community votes to burn 2.97 billion of erroneously minted aUSD stablecoin

A total of 3.022 billion aUSD were previously minted via a liquidity bridge glitch.

According to a new post by Acala Network co-founder Bette Chen, the community has voted to burn 2.97 billion worth of Acala USD (aUSD) stablecoin.

Acala is a decentralized finance platform built on the Polkadot (DOT) ecosystem. The week prior, the price of aUSD fell to less than $0.01 from its dollar peg after it was discovered that 3.022 billion aUSD had been erroneously minted through a misconfiguration of the iBTC/aUSD liquidity pool, which went live on August 14. 

The misconfiguration has since been rectified, and wallet addresses that received the erroneously minted aUSD have been identified via on-chain tracing. Over 99% of all newly minted aUSD remains on the Acala parachain. However, an estimated $9.69 million worth of funds were swapped from aUSD to DOT and sent to centralized exchanges.

Thirty-five accounts were also identified as having acquired an excess of 12.38 million erroneously minted aUSD.

aUSD is over-collateralized by a variety of digital assets in the Polkadot and Kusama ecosystem, with a deposit rate of 195% per aUSD minted. Yet, the stablecoin's current price of $0.84 indicates that the erroneously minted coins are still disrupting the system's equilibrium. Developers have issued bounties and public calls for the glitched assets to be returned back to the Acala network. Chen also warned:

"Many of the services on Acala have been disrupted. Therefore the team is trying to strike a balance between accuracy and speed. We still have a bit to go before services on Acala can be fully resumed, and as more traces on aUSD error mints are being completed, our community will have a clearer picture of formulating aUSD recovery proposals."

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Tether Hires BDO Italia for Monthly Assurance Reports, USDT’s Quarterly Attestation Shows a 58% Decrease in Commercial Paper

Tether Hires BDO Italia for Monthly Assurance Reports, USDT’s Quarterly Attestation Shows a 58% Decrease in Commercial PaperThis week, the stablecoin issuer Tether Holdings Limited revealed an update to its assurance and attestation process and detailed that the company has been working with accounting firm BDO Italia. The accounting firm will conduct monthly tether assurance reports based on the stablecoin issuer’s reserves. The following day, Tether published its quarterly assurance opinion completed […]

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Another Stablecoin Fluctuates Wildly as HUSD Slips Below USD Peg to $0.82 per Token

Another Stablecoin Fluctuates Wildly as HUSD Slips Below USD Peg to alt=The stablecoin HUSD, originally associated with the crypto exchange Huobi Global, lost its peg with the U.S. dollar on Wednesday, August 17, and it dropped even lower in value the following day on Thursday, August 18. On Thursday, Huobi addressed the public on Twitter and the exchange said “we are aware of the current liquidity […]

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Another depeg — Acala trace report reveals 3B aUSD erroneously minted

As the dust settles on another decentralized finance exploit, Acala continues to trace tokens that were erroneously minted after a misconfiguration in a newly launched liquidity pool.

High-profile security incidents continue to be a theme in 2022 as the Acala Network joined a long list of stricken platforms to fall prey to exploits.

Acala’s aUSD token, which acts as the native stablecoin for the Polkadot and Kusama blockchains, saw its value plummet 99% after a misconfiguration of the iBTC/aUSD liquidity pool was exploited after its launch on Aug. 14. Initial estimates from Acala noted that 1.2 billion aUSD were minted without the necessary collateral - seeing the token’s value depeg from its 1:1 USD ratio to a bottom of $.01.

Acala put its network in maintenance mode to freeze funds and eventually managed to recoup a significant portion of the uncollateralized tokens. The Acala community proposed and voted on a referendum to identify and destroy the erroneously minted tokens to return its USD peg to parity at $1.

1,288,561,129 aUSD minted on 16 specific accounts were returned to the network’s honzon protocol to be burnt. Another 4,299,119 erroneously minted aUSD remaining in the iBTC/aUSD reward pool were also destroyed.

While the cryptocurrency community considers whether the Acala Network took the right decision to essentially freeze its network, the stablecoin was able to be re-pegged in a short turnaround with the community playing its role in the chosen path to undo the exploit.

Interlay, a service that allows users to wrap Bitcoin to iBTC and then use it across decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms, was drawn into the situation as the iBTC/aUSD pool was chiefly affected by the exploit. Cointelegraph reached out to Interlay to ascertain the details of the incident and lessons to be taken forward. Acala, on the other hand, refused to comment.

While investigations are still ongoing, the theory is that the misconfiguration in the iBTC/aUSD allowed an attacker to mint an erroneous amount of aUSD. This then led to fears that the attacker would buy iBTC with the illicit aUSD tokens and convert that to BTC - which would have nullified the Acala Network's ability to recoup the tokens and restore its peg. 

Interlay co-founder Alexei Zamyatin told Cointelegraph that their protocol had not been compromised by the attack despite having direct exposure to the affected liquidity pools:

"Acala did use iBTC in the affected pools alongside other, non-Interlay assets, but the incident has not jeopardized Interlay as a network in any way. All system operations have been and remain fully functional."

The company's incident trace report is being constantly updated to provide more information regarding the 16 addresses that received erroneously minted rewards.

According to the update, more than 3 billion aUSD were minted and claimed by the 17 flagged liquidity provider addresses. Following the Acala community referendum, some 1.29 billion were burnt while another 1.6 billion aUSD error mints remain on these 16 addresses on the Acala parachain.

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Network and token freeze after Acala exploit raises questions

The Acala hack saw over a billion aUSD stablecoins minted from thin air, but now community members are scratching their heads wondering how a decentralized protocol would handle the clean up.

The Acala Network’s aUSD stablecoin depegged by over 99% over the weekend and forced the Acala team to pause a hacker’s wallet, raising concerns about its claim of being decentralized.

On Aug. 14, a hacker took advantage of a bug on the iBTC/aUSD liquidity pool which resulted in 1.2 billion aUSD being minted without collateral. This event crashed the USD-pegged stablecoin to a cent, and in response, the Acala team froze the erroneously minted tokens by placing the network in maintenance mode.

The move also halted other features such as swaps, xcm (cross-chain communications on Polkadot), and the oracle pallet price feeds until “further notice”

While the move to put the network in maintenance mode and freeze funds in the hacker’s wallet may have been meant to protect users and the network from any further harm, proponents of decentralization have cried foul.

Acala is a cross-chain decentralized finance (DeFi) hub that issues the aUSD stablecoin based on the Polkadot (DOT) blockchain. aUSD is a crypto-backed stablecoin which Acala claims is censorship-resistant. iBTC is a form of wrapped Bitcoin (BTC) which can be used in DeFi protocols.

Community members have noted the irony of Acala’s claims about aUSD’s censorship-resistance since the protocol froze funds so swiftly. Twitter user Gr33nHatt3R.dot pointed out on Aug. 14 that decisions "would have to go to governance to be 'decentralized' finance."

“If Acala centrally controls that decision is this really DeFi?”

A member of the project’s Discord channel usafmike proposed rolling back the chain to reverse the token mints altogether, but was challenged by skylordafk.dot, another member who said such an action would “set a harmful precedent.”

As of the time of writing, the network was still in maintenance mode to block all token transfers, but the team confirmed that the bug had been fixed. The wallets that received erroneously minted aUSD have been identified, and 99% of them were still on Acala which leaves the possibility that they may be retrieved by the community if it votes to do so.

Related: Binance recovers the majority of funds stolen from Curve Finance

The Acala exploit is the second major one in a week as Curve Finance (CRV) experienced an attack on its front end on Aug. 9 which directed users to approve a malicious contract. Acala’s problem differs from Curve’s as the latter’s pools were not compromised as users who directly interacted with its smart contracts experienced no issues.

aUSD is the latest stablecoin to lose its peg in the past few months, starting notoriously with Terra USD (UST) in May, which has since been renamed to Terra Classic USD (USTC). Other notable depegs include Tether (USDT) and Dei (DEI).

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Another Stablecoin Depegs From USD Parity, Polkadot-Based AUSD Loses 98% in Value

Another Stablecoin Depegs From USD Parity, Polkadot-Based AUSD Loses 98% in Value2022 has been the year of broken stablecoins as a myriad of dollar-pegged crypto assets depegged from their dollar value this year. On August 14, the Polkadot-based stablecoin alpaca usd (AUSD) dropped below a U.S. penny in value, only to bounce back to the $0.95 region hours later. Reports say that the Acala protocol was […]

After TRUMP Coin Pump and Crash, Meme Index Introduces Meme Coin Indexes to Combat Market Volatility