Stablecoin growth has grasped the Fed’s attention: Avanti Bank & Trust CEO

Caitlin Long, Avanti Bank & Trust Founder & CEO, joins Yahoo Finance live to discuss how the crypto market is faring amid the pandemic.

Video Transcript

ZACK GUZMAN: Well, it started with a whisper at the Fed, just one mention of stablecoins. But it's grown into a bit more of a serious warning when it comes to at least looking into potential systemic risks being posed by cryptocurrencies, particularly the explosion of stablecoins. And as a quick refresher, there may be good reason to pay attention to them. Stablecoins are a special type of cryptocurrency that try to maintain the price of one US dollar. In that sense, they're not that much different than a money market fund, which also balances out to keep shares at $1.

But they are a bit different in that they aren't regulated in what they can hold. To keep prices at $1, the largest stablecoin, for example, Tether, which, in its early days, purported to be backed 1 to 1 by US dollars, earlier this year, revealed that it only was back by about 3% in cash holdings. Most of its cash equivalents were held in short-term debt in the form of commercial paper. But it even held corporate bonds and precious metals, something that a normal money market fund would normally not be allowed to hold.

And there is, of course, precedent for why the Fed would be worried here, they had to step in to effectively bail out money market funds during the '08 financial crisis when they got hit with massive withdrawals and the panic that ensued there. It almost crashed the whole system. And take a listen to what Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said on Yahoo Finance last week, as he was connecting the dots in that space.

ERIC ROSENGREN: I do worry that the stablecoin market that is currently pretty much unregulated as it grows and becomes a more important sector of our economy, that we need to take seriously what happens if people run from these type of instruments very quickly, and just like the money market funds, caused a bad disruption in credit markets. I think a future financial stability problem could be occurring if we don't start thinking carefully about what happens to things like stablecoins next time we have a bad market difficulty.

ZACK GUZMAN: Joining us now for more on that is one of the smartest people in crypto, the CEO and founder at Avanti Bank, among the first to win a banking charter in crypto. Caitlin Long joins us now. And Caitlin, good to be chatting. I guess, you know, if you think about the size of Tether, it's not small, $65 billion roughly, roughly the same size of one of the Reserve funds we run into issues in the crisis. I mean, what do you make about the attention that it's getting from the Fed sablecoins writ large, the attention they're getting from the Fed now?