A. Glossary of Terms
This glossary provides definitions for technical terms, financial concepts, and blockchain terminology used throughout this paper. Terms are organized thematically for easy reference.
Core Stablecoin Concepts
Stablecoin: A digital currency designed to maintain stable value relative to a reference asset, typically the US dollar
Peg: A fixed exchange rate between two currencies or assets; for stablecoins, typically maintaining 1:1 value with USD Example: 1 USDC should always equal $1.00
Collateral: Assets held in reserve to back the value of issued stablecoins; can include cash, government securities, or cryptocurrencies
Reserve: The total pool of assets held by a stablecoin issuer to support the circulating supply and maintain the peg
Mint/Burn: Creating new stablecoin tokens (minting) when dollars are deposited, or destroying them (burning) when redeemed
Market Cap: Total value of all stablecoins in circulation; calculated as number of tokens × price per token
Attestation: Third-party verification by accounting firms confirming reserve assets exist
Custodian: Regulated entity like BNY Mellon that holds and safeguards reserve assets
Float: The profit potential from investing reserve assets while stablecoins remain in circulation
Seigniorage: Revenue generated from the difference between the cost of creating money and its face value
Stability Mechanisms
Fiat-backed: Stablecoins backed 1:1 by traditional currency reserves held in bank accounts
Crypto-backed: Stablecoins collateralized by cryptocurrencies, typically over-collateralized for safety Example: MakerDAO requires $150 of ETH to borrow $100 of DAI
Algorithmic: Stablecoins that use smart contracts and economic incentives to maintain stability without full collateral backing
Hybrid: Stablecoins combining multiple stability mechanisms, such as partial reserves with algorithmic adjustments
Over-collateralization: Holding reserves worth more than issued stablecoins as a safety buffer
Oracle: A trusted data feed that provides blockchain systems with real-world information like current exchange rates
Rebase: Automatic adjustment of token supply in user wallets to maintain price stability
Blockchain Infrastructure
Blockchain: A distributed digital ledger that records all transactions across a network of computers
Smart Contract: Computer programs that automatically execute agreements when conditions are met
Token: A digital representation of value or rights on a blockchain; stablecoins are a type of token
Layer 1 (L1): Base blockchain protocols like Ethereum or Solana
Layer 2 (L2): Scaling solutions built on top of L1 blockchains that offer faster, cheaper transactions Examples: Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon
Gas Fees: Transaction costs paid to process operations on a blockchain network, typically $0.01-50 depending on the network
On-chain: Activities that occur directly on the blockchain and are publicly recorded
Off-chain: Activities in traditional systems or private databases not recorded on blockchain
Block Confirmation: The process of validating and permanently recording transactions in a blockchain
Network Congestion: High transaction volume causing delays and increased fees
Digital Wallets & Security
Wallet: Software or hardware that stores the cryptographic keys needed to access and transfer digital assets
Private Key: Secret code that controls your digital assets; anyone with this key owns your funds
Public Address: The shareable identifier for receiving digital assets, like an email address for money
Recovery/Seed Phrase: A 12-24 word backup phrase that can restore wallet access if device is lost Example: "hotel obvious agent lecture merit toast..."
Custodial Wallet: Service where a company controls your private keys (like traditional banking)
Non-Custodial Wallet: You control your own private keys (full ownership and responsibility)
Hot Wallet: Internet-connected storage for daily use and convenience
Cold Wallet: Offline hardware storage for maximum security
MetaMask: Popular browser extension wallet for interacting with blockchain applications
Web3 Wallet: Digital wallet that enables interaction with decentralized applications
Two-Factor Authentication (2FA): Additional security layer requiring two forms of verification
Trading & Exchange
Centralized Exchange (CEX): Company-operated platform like Coinbase or Binance for trading cryptocurrencies
Decentralized Exchange (DEX): Automated protocol like Uniswap for peer-to-peer trading without intermediaries
On-ramp: Converting traditional money into stablecoins or cryptocurrencies
Off-ramp: Converting stablecoins or cryptocurrencies back to traditional currency
KYC (Know Your Customer): Identity verification procedures required by financial services
AML (Anti-Money Laundering): Regulatory procedures to prevent illegal financial activities
Liquidity: The ease with which an asset can be bought or sold without affecting its price
Slippage: Price difference between expected and executed trades during volatile periods
Spread: Difference between buy and sell prices in a market
Market Maker: Entities providing continuous buy/sell orders to maintain liquidity and price stability
P2P (Peer-to-Peer): Direct transactions between individuals without institutional intermediaries
DeFi & Financial Applications
DeFi (Decentralized Finance): Financial services built on blockchain without traditional banks as intermediaries
Yield: Returns generated from holding or lending stablecoins, typically 2-8% annually
Staking: Locking tokens in a protocol to earn rewards or interest
Lending Protocol: Platform where users can lend stablecoins to earn interest or borrow against collateral
Liquidity Pool: Funds locked in smart contracts to facilitate trading and earn fees
APY (Annual Percentage Yield): Annualized rate of return including compound interest
TVL (Total Value Locked): Total amount of assets deposited in a DeFi protocol
Basis Trade: Arbitrage strategy exploiting funding rate differences between spot and futures markets
Funding Rate: Periodic payments between long and short positions in perpetual futures markets
Arbitrage: Profiting from price differences between markets, helping maintain stablecoin pegs
Velocity of Money: Rate at which money circulates through an economy; stablecoins have 7x higher velocity than traditional dollars
Traditional Payment Systems
SWIFT: International bank messaging network processing $150 trillion annually in cross-border payments
Wire Transfer: Direct bank-to-bank electronic payment, typically costing $25-45 internationally
ACH (Automated Clearing House): US system for electronic bank transfers, processing direct deposits and bill payments
SEPA: European system for euro transfers between EU countries
Correspondent Banking: Network of bank relationships required for international transfers
Settlement: Final transfer of assets to complete a transaction; instant for stablecoins versus 1-5 days for traditional transfers
Clearing: Process of reconciling transactions before settlement
Remittance: Money sent by migrant workers to families in home countries; $685 billion market annually
Foreign Exchange (FX) Spread: Hidden cost in currency conversion, often 1-3% above market rates
Nostro/Vostro Accounts: Accounts banks hold with each other to facilitate international transfers
Payment Rails: Infrastructure and networks that move money between parties
Risk Terminology
De-peg: When a stablecoin loses its intended value and trades above or below its target Example: USDC briefly traded at $0.87 during the March 2023 banking crisis
Bank Run: Mass withdrawal attempts that can destabilize an institution if reserves are insufficient
Death Spiral: Self-reinforcing collapse in algorithmic stablecoins when confidence is lost Example: Terra/UST's $60 billion collapse in May 2022
Counterparty Risk: The possibility that the stablecoin issuer or their bank may fail
Smart Contract Risk: Potential for bugs in blockchain code to cause loss of funds
Liquidity Risk: Inability to quickly convert stablecoins to cash during stressed conditions
Operational Risk: Potential losses from failed internal processes, systems, or external events
Systemic Risk: Potential for stablecoin problems to spread and affect broader financial stability
Contagion: Spread of financial instability from one institution or asset to others
Black Swan Event: Unpredictable event with severe consequences
Regulatory Classifications
Money Transmitter: US legal classification for entities transferring monetary value
E-money Token: European regulatory classification for stablecoins under MiCA regulation
Payment Stablecoin: Proposed US regulatory category for stablecoins used primarily for payments
Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP): Entity providing cryptocurrency services under FATF guidelines
Money Services Business (MSB): US classification requiring registration with FinCEN
Payment Institution: European classification for non-bank payment service providers
MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets): Comprehensive EU regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies
Stablecoin Bill: Proposed US federal legislation to regulate stablecoin issuers
BitLicense: New York State regulatory framework for cryptocurrency businesses
Shadow Banking: Financial activities mimicking traditional banking but outside standard regulatory oversight
Regulatory Arbitrage: Operating in jurisdictions with favorable regulations
Capital Controls: Government restrictions on moving money across borders
Regional & Specialized Terms
Dollarization: Adopting USD or USD-backed stablecoins when local currency becomes unstable
Remittance Corridor: Specific country-to-country payment route for migrant workers
Hawala: Traditional informal money transfer system common in Middle East and South Asia
Mobile Money: Digital payment systems accessed via mobile phones, popular in Africa
CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency): Digital version of national currency issued by central banks
Financial Inclusion: Providing access to financial services for unbanked populations
Inflation Hedge: Using stablecoins to protect savings from local currency devaluation
Parallel Exchange Rate: Unofficial market rate differing from official government rate
Capital Flight: Large-scale movement of assets out of a country due to economic instability
Market Metrics & Analysis
Volatility: Degree of price fluctuation over time; what stablecoins aim to minimize
Market Depth: Amount of buy and sell orders at different price levels
24-Hour Volume: Total transaction value in the past 24 hours
Circulating Supply: Number of tokens currently available in the market
Treasury: Stablecoin issuer's own holdings separate from customer reserves
Burn Address: Blockchain address where tokens are sent to be permanently removed from circulation
Whale: Individual or entity holding large amounts of cryptocurrency
Market Manipulation: Illegal practices to artificially influence asset prices
Wash Trading: Fake trading activity to inflate volume statistics
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