DeFi
It is no secret that Curve is planning to launch its own stablecoin.
And now, the community governance for Curve Protocol will be voting on whether or not it will enable stablecoin pools that use oracle price feeds.
Oracle price feeds are independent data feed operators that monitor real-time information from financial markets and then feed price data onto the blockchain.
This will be a requirement for crvUSD. The stable token is designed using an algorithm called the Lending-Liquidating AMM (LLAMMA), a cross between traditional AMM and a lending market, according to its white paper.
“Instead of liquidation resulting in loss of collateral, LLAMMA will gradually shift user deposits between the collateral and crvUSD as the price of the collateral changes,” Blockworks Research analyst Dan Smith said.
In the case where the price of the collateral used to mint crvUSD falls — for example, ETH — LLAMMA will convert crvUSD back into ETH to prevent insolvency, Smith said.
“The price of the collateral must be known for this to function properly, so the recent proposal that introduces new Curve pools that can pull price from an external oracle is critical infrastructure for the launch of Curve’s stablecoin,” he said.
Voting went on chain on Feb. 13 and will close on Feb. 20. A quorum of 30% is required for the vote to pass. So far, 100% of voters are in favor of the proposal, but only 2.09% of votes have been cast.
The native token of CurveDAO, CRV — which is used to vote on proposals — has seen its price increase over the past two days, from $0.92 to $1.09.
One factor is the decision by the US SEC and New York financial regulators to crack down on BUSD, the Binance-branded stablecoin issued by Paxos and backed by cash and US Treasurys.
As pressure from lawmakers tests the mettle of centralized stablecoin providers, there may be a window for more decentralized stablecoins to gain traction.