USDT Widens Gap With USDC After Recent Hacks

By Cointribune EN
8 days ago
DRIFT DEFI USDC

Hacks no longer just weaken DeFi, but they are already reshaping the stablecoin market balance. In just a few days, a series of major attacks triggered a massive shift of capital towards assets perceived as the safest. In this climate of mistrust, Tether (USDT) significantly strengthens its dominant position over USDC, benefiting from an investor protection reflex. This shift reveals a deeper change in the stablecoin hierarchy.

In brief

  • A wave of major hacks in DeFi triggers a swift movement of capital towards assets perceived as the safest.
  • The Drift Protocol hack, estimated at $285 million, acts as a trigger for this shift.
  • Investors massively redirect their funds to Tether, strengthening its dominant market position.
  • Data confirms this trend with USDT outpacing a slowing USDC.

DeFi hacks and the rush to USDT

The tipping point occurred following a series of attacks targeting DeFi protocols, including the major Drift Protocol hack on Solana, estimated at about $285 million. In response to these events, users quickly redirected their capital towards safer assets.

This dynamic directly benefited Tether. Thus, “Tether’s dominance over Circle’s USDC strengthens” in a context where investors seek liquid and proven solutions.

This movement was immediately reflected in market data :

  • USDT market cap is at a record level, with an increase of about 2.1 % reaching nearly $188 billion ;
  • A more moderate growth of USDC, limited to +1.4 % ;
  • Migration of DeFi capital towards USDT following security incidents ;
  • The multiplication of hacks, some attributed to groups linked to North Korea.

These elements indicate a rapid reaction of investors to risk, with an arbitrage in favor of the dominant asset in terms of liquidity.

A reinforced domination dynamic beyond incidents

Beyond the immediate reaction to hacks, on-chain data reflect a more structural trend in the stablecoin market. Crisis episodes amplify a reflex already ingrained in investors: favor assets offering the greatest market depth.

In this context, Tether benefits from a historical advantage, consolidated by its central role in crypto exchanges. This dominant position strengthens as tensions emerge, as users turn to USDT as a fallback solution.

Such an evolution reveals a growing imbalance between the two main stablecoins on the market. While USDC remains firmly established, its slower growth reflects a relative loss of momentum during stress phases. The observed differential is not only based on recent events but on a risk and liquidity perception that expresses itself more strongly during periods of uncertainty.

In the long term, these episodes raise questions about the ability of different issuers to maintain trust in an environment where each incident acts as a real-world test. Tether’s dominance, reinforced in these critical moments, could continue to expand if market conditions remain unstable, while reigniting the debate on stablecoin market concentration and its implications for the crypto ecosystem.

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