You are viewing a single comment's thread:

RE: Why you should vote for Proposal 206 and build a bridge to Binance

(edited)

It's not impossible to exchange high amounts of HBD but it takes patience. You can't just do it in one go. The stabilizer exchanges $100K per day and sometimes multiples of that without moving the market much (if it did move the market, it would stop trading, and it often doesn't). It also does depend on market conditions to an extent, but this is not rare. This, of course, is HIVE-HBD. If you are coming from another stablecoin, fiat, another crypto, etc., you have to buy HIVE first, then get it on chain to use the internal market. HIVE has decent liquidity, but you have to do two trades, and you can't buy too much HIVE at one time unless you want to take additional HIVE price risk. So overall it is high friction.

I agree utility would improve with more convenient and consistent ways to access liquidity.

0.01804201 BEE
1 comments

Agree it's not impossible :) But it involves the risk in time because of 2 steps.

Example. I want to sell X HBD for Hive. I sell 50%, now I have the risk in Hive price ( both ways).

For a stablecoin ( because it's the main reason to hold it) you want low risks.

So you need to be a programmer or stay nonstop on the computer to remove that risk.

Simple real-world example:

I want to buy something for 1000$, I move 1000HBD out and receive 975$, because it stays 1 day in hive ( i think 1k is no problem, but only to show the problem).

A pool between HBD and another stable coin can have a fee, but removes the "random factor".

Would make trades more predictable and efficient IMO, special if we want more people to really use HBD for whatever they want to use it.

And stability and predictable future ( in terms of you can trade it) is IMO the key element of a working stablecoin.

3E-8 BEE