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De-Peg

A de-peg event occurs when a financial asset, whose value is supposed to be fixed to another asset, breaks away from that fixed price. Think of it as a promise of stability being suddenly broken. This “peg” is a fixed exchange rate, most commonly tying a country's currency to a more stable one like the US Dollar, or, in the modern digital world, tying a cryptocurrencystablecoin” to a fiat currency. For example, a stablecoin might promise to always be worth exactly $1.00. A de-peg happens when market forces or a failure in its underlying mechanism cause its price to fall below—or sometimes shoot above—that target. This isn't a gentle drift; a de-peg is often a sudden, violent market event that can wipe out fortunes overnight, as it signals a complete loss of confidence in the asset's promised value.

Why Do Pegs Exist in the First Place?

Pegs are all about creating an island of stability in a sea of volatility. They are designed to make financial life easier and more predictable.

How Does a De-Peg Happen?

A peg is not magic; it must be actively defended. When the defense fails, so does the peg. The reasons for failure differ slightly between traditional currencies and their new digital cousins.

In Traditional Currencies

A currency peg is maintained by a country's central bank. The bank stands ready to buy or sell its own currency in the open market to keep the price at the pegged level. If its currency is weakening, it will buy it up using its foreign exchange reserves (e.g., its stash of US Dollars). A de-peg typically occurs when the central bank can no longer withstand the market pressure.

In Cryptocurrencies (Stablecoins)

Stablecoin de-pegs are a masterclass in risk. How they de-peg depends on how they were built.

A Value Investor's Perspective on De-Pegs

For a value investing practitioner, a de-peg event is not a trading opportunity; it's a profound lesson in risk management and fundamental analysis.