After a dip of over $1 billion in the past 30 days, BUSD now sits fourth in market capitalization among stablecoins.
NEWS
The United States dollar-pegged Binance USD
stablecoin now sits at fourth position in market capitalization among other stablecoins, following a dip of over $1 billion in the past 30 days, data from CoinMarketCap shows.
At the time of writing, the BUSD market cap stands at $4.3 billion, down 29% from $5.54 billion on May 18. The stablecoin has been in a downward trend since December 2022, when its market cap topped $23 billion.
The decline in BUSD’s market cap parallels major developments surrounding Binance following FTX’s dramatic collapse in November 2022. In December 2022, a report indicating the U.S. Department of Justice would target Binance led to net withdrawals of $3.6 billion in seven days. The exchange saw massive BUSD redemptions from market makers, including more than $245 million from Jump Finance.
A partnership between Binance and Paxos Trust created the BUSD stablecoin in September 2019. Paxos issues and owns the product, while Binance licenses its brand. For Paxos, the partnership brought new challenges. In February, the company was reportedly served a Wells notice from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission alleging that BUSD was an unregistered security.
Related: Stablecoins 101 — What are crypto stablecoins, and how do they work?
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The investigation led the New York Department of Financial Services to order Paxos to stop the issuance of BUSD. Together, these episodes took a significant bite out of BUSD’s market share, dropping from $15.88 billion on February 12 to $8.38 billion on March 13.
The most recent blow came from the SEC lawsuit against Binance on June 5 for allegedly offering unregistered securities. The U.S. regulator pressed 13 charges against the exchange, including unregistered offers and sales of the BNB
and BUSD tokens.
The market dominance of stablecoins pegged to the U.S. dollar has undergone some changes over the past year, with Tether
climbing back to its all-time high, despite most stablecoins market caps declining.
saw its market share decline from 34.88% in May 2022 to 23.05% in May 2023. Market participation of BUSD plunged from 11.68% to 4.18% in the same period, while Dai’s
$1.00 share of the crypto market was at 3.66%, down from 4.05% in May 2022.
USDT, on the other hand, is gaining traction. The stablecoin’s market dominance stood at 65.89% in May, up from 47.04% a year ago. Its market capitalization has risen to $83.1 billion, while USDC’s market cap has dropped from a peak of $55 billion to $29 billion.