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Minting and redeeming of stablecoins with resilience to bank run and depeg risks

Dynamic Stability Mechanism

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Overview

Stablecoin units can be minted and redeemed in the Dynamic Stability Mechanism (DSM).

There is no central issuer. Users can mint and redeem stablecoin units directly against the permissionless and transparent Gyroscope system. There is no counterparty.

The shape of the DSM (i.e., the bonding curves that quote prices to mint/ redeem) is a function of the current reserve ratio and outflows.

Stylized DSM redemption curve

The stylized DSM redemption curve for different reserve ratio levels is shown below, against the example of a 50-50 Uniswap pool.

Stylized DSM redemption curve

Stylized DSM redemption curve

Examples and further explanations

Redemptions with collateral close to 100%

If the stablecoin just becomes undercollateralized and starts to trade below par, the redemption curve starts near $1 to enable good liquidity around the peg.

Redemptions with collateral well below 100%

If continued redemptions occur, i.e., the 'outflow' increases, the redemption curve eventually moves to the ‘circuit-breaker phase’. At this circuit breaker, the redemption rate decreases below the actual reserve ratio, at which redemptions are always sustainable.

In that case, the bonding curve of the redemption market provides decreasing redemption quotes as a circuit breaker. The goal is to disincentivize runs and attacks on the currency peg, while enabling users to exit, but rewarding users that wait for a transitory downturn to pass.

Importantly, even if stablecoin holders decide to exit, Gyroscope provides rational reasons to bet on the stablecoin returning to its target price, as the redemption price autonomously recovers back toward peg as outflows equilibrate back toward zero or the reserve recovers (e.g., through yield).

The DSM design is fully specified, formally characterized, and optimized in our DSM technical paper (formerly known as P-AMM).