The market capitalization of USD Coin (USDC), a stablecoin issued by U.S.-based payment tech firm Circle, has dropped below $50 billion for the first time since January 2022.
On the weekly chart, USDC's market cap, which reflects the number of U.S. dollar-backed tokens in circulation, fell to $49.39 billion on Sep. 26, down almost 12% from its record high of $55.88 billion, established merely three months ago.
In contrast, the market cap of Tether (USDT), which risked losing its top stablecoin position to USDC in May, crossed above $68 billion on Sep. 26, albeit still down 17.4% from its record high of $82.33 billion in May 2022.
The divergence between USDT and USDC shows investors' renewed preference for the former. Let's take a look at the factors boosting Tether as the top stablecoin.
Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange by volume, announced earlier in September that it would convert its users' USDC balances for its own stablecoin, Binance USD (BUSD). The conversion will commence on Sep. 29 and does not apply to USDT.
The exchange said it wants to "enhance liquidity and capital-efficiency for users" via what appears to be a forced conversion in an increasingly competitive stablecoin sector. As a result, Binance suspended spot, future and margin trading in USDC.
8/ 1. Binance's forced "Auto-conversion" is blatantly monopolistic behavior of a typical FinTech companyThey are no better than traditional banks that have the power to freeze or take control of user fundsWhere is the decentralized future that #Web3 users were promised?
USDC's market cap has plunged by $9.5 billion since the announcement.
Following Binance's footsteps, the India-based cryptocurrency exchange also stopped deposits of USDC beginning Sep.
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