Table of Contents

UST (TerraUSD Classic)

The 30-Second Summary

What is UST (TerraUSD Classic)? A Plain English Definition

Imagine you're at a casino. You go to the cashier, hand over a real $100 bill, and receive 100 casino chips. Each chip is worth $1. You can play with them, and when you're done, you can go back to the cashier and exchange your chips for real dollars. This works because the casino keeps your $100 bill (and everyone else's) in a vault. For every $1 chip in circulation, there's a real $1 backing it. This is how a traditional, collateralized stablecoin (like USDC or USDT) works. It's simple, and it's backed by real assets. Now, imagine a different, “magical” casino. This casino has no vault full of dollars. Instead, when you ask for a $1 chip, it just creates one for you. To keep this magical chip worth $1, the casino runs a clever, automated system. Next to the chip cashier is another counter that trades the casino's own “loyalty points” (let's call them LUNA points). The system is programmed with a simple rule: anyone can, at any time, exchange one magical chip for exactly $1 worth of LUNA points, or vice versa.

This was the basic idea behind UST (the magical chip) and LUNA (the loyalty points). It was an “algorithmic stablecoin.” It wasn't backed by a vault of dollars, but by an algorithm and the belief that LUNA would always have value and that traders would always be there to “arbitrage” the price back to $1. For a while, the magic worked. But what happens if people suddenly lose faith in the whole casino? What if they start to think the LUNA loyalty points are worthless? In May 2022, that's exactly what happened. A few large players started selling huge amounts of UST. The price dropped slightly below $1. The algorithm kicked in, as designed, and started creating billions upon billions of new LUNA tokens to swap for the UST being sold. But because so many people were rushing for the exit at once, the supply of LUNA exploded, causing its price to crash. This triggered a “death spiral.” The more UST people sold, the more new LUNA was created. The more LUNA was created, the more its price fell. The more LUNA's price fell, the less confidence people had that the system could save UST. This feedback loop spun out of control until both UST and LUNA became virtually worthless. The magical chip wasn't backed by anything real, and when the magic spell of collective belief was broken, its value vanished.

“The most dangerous words in investing are: 'this time it's different'.” - Sir John Templeton

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

For a value investor, the story of UST is not just a fascinating disaster; it is a profound validation of core principles. It's a case study in what not to do and what to watch out for. A disciplined value investor would have identified the fatal flaws in UST from the outset by applying fundamental tenets of their philosophy.

How to Apply It in Practice

The goal is not to “apply” UST, but to apply the harsh lessons from its failure. You can use its story to create a mental checklist—a “Litmus Test”—to protect yourself from similar traps in the future, whether they appear in cryptocurrency, tech stocks, or any other corner of the market.

The "UST Litmus Test": A Framework for Skepticism

Before considering any investment, especially one that seems new, innovative, or unusually profitable, run it through these four questions.

  1. 1. What is the ultimate source of its value?
    • Ask yourself: “What do I actually own here?” Is it a fractional ownership of a profitable business that sells real products or services (a stock)? Is it a loan to a solvent entity that is legally required to pay me back (a bond)? Or is its value dependent on a complex mechanism, market sentiment, or the hope that someone else will buy it from me for a higher price later (greater_fool_theory)?
    • If the value is not anchored to a tangible, cash-flow-producing asset, it is likely a speculation, not an investment.
  2. 2. Where does the “yield” or “return” truly come from?
    • High returns must come from somewhere. Is the return generated by a company's profits? Is it interest paid from a borrower's successful business operations? Or is it being manufactured? Be highly suspicious of yields that are subsidized by venture capital funds to attract users, or that are paid out by printing more of a related, volatile token.
    • Unsustainable yields are a classic marketing gimmick to attract capital into fragile systems. Real returns come from real, sustainable economic activity.
  3. 3. Where is the true margin of safety?
    • Ask the question: “What happens if my primary thesis is wrong?” What protects my principal from permanent loss? In a stock, the margin of safety might be a strong balance sheet and a purchase price far below the company's liquidation value. In a bond, it's the assets backing the loan.
    • Be wary if the proposed “safety net” is part of the same complex system you are investing in. A true margin of safety should be independent of the mechanism that is supposed to generate your return.
  4. 4. Can I simply and confidently explain this to a teenager?
    • This is the ultimate test of your own understanding. If you cannot explain how the investment works, how it makes money, and what its primary risks are in simple, clear language, you have ventured outside your circle_of_competence.
    • Complexity is where risk hides. If you don't understand it, don't invest in it. Period.

A Practical Example

Let's use our Litmus Test to compare two hypothetical assets vying for a spot in your portfolio.

Analysis via the “UST Litmus Test”
Question Investment A: “Steady Soap Co. Stock” Investment B: “Nexus Protocol Token (NPT)“
————–———————————————————————————————
1. Source of Value? Fractional ownership of a 100-year-old company with factories, global brands, and distribution networks. Value is tied to its ability to generate profits from selling soap. Ownership of a token whose value is determined by a complex algorithm that balances a “stable” token. Value depends on user growth and faith in the code.
2. Source of Return? Dividends paid from company profits and potential stock price appreciation as those profits grow over the long term. A 30% “staking yield” that is paid out by the protocol minting more NPT tokens. The yield is funded by token inflation, diluting all holders.
3. Margin of Safety? You buy the stock at a price that is 40% below your conservative estimate of the company's intrinsic value, based on its assets and future earnings. Even if profits fall, you have a cushion. The “safety” is a “treasury fund” composed entirely of the protocol's own volatile token. A crisis in the token would wipe out the safety fund.
4. Can you explain it? “I own a small piece of a company that makes soap. People buy soap in good times and bad. The company makes a profit and sometimes shares it with me.” “Well, there's a smart contract that… uh… it uses a bonding curve to algorithmically manage the supply… and the yield comes from inflationary rewards, which encourages… uh… liquidity provision.”
Conclusion
A value investor clearly sees a durable, understandable, asset-backed investment. A value investor sees extreme complexity, an artificial yield, and a self-referential system with no real safety net. This is a clear “avoid.”

Advantages and Limitations

While UST ultimately proved to be a failure, it's important for investors to understand the promised advantages that made it so attractive, as these same siren songs will undoubtedly be used to promote future speculative assets.

The Promised Strengths (The Siren's Song)

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls (The Inevitable Reality)

1)
It was largely being subsidized by venture capital and LUNA inflation, not generated by any real economic activity.