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Everything You Need To Know About The HBD Haircut Rule And The Latest Updates| The Biggest Risk For The HBD Price

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@dalz
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Unlike every other stablecoin that promises to keep its peg to the dollar at all times, but then fails to do that, HBD is embracing the volatility and is designed to lose its peg in a controlled manner.
All of the top stablecoins have lost their peg at some point. USDT/Tether has lost its peg most recently in May/June 2022, when it traded around 95 cents for a short period of the day, and previously has broken its peg in 2017. USDC has lost its peg weeks ago and dropped to 87 cents. DAI did the same, and has lost its peg previously as well, in March 2020, when the Covid market crash happened. BUSD, that is relatively new has also has troubles and dropped a bit, although not that much. Not to mention now dead UST. The point from the above is that all the top stablecoins had troubles at some point in the last years. HBD is not promising to keep its peg at all times at all costs, but has in place a protective mechanism, that is set to lose its peg by design. This is what we refer to as the Haircut rule.

What Is The Haircut Rule?

Hive Backed Dollars, as the name suggest are dollars backed by HIVE. What this means is that each HBD can be converted for one dollar worth of HIVE through on chain conversions, where HBD is destroyed, and HIVE is created. The blockchain guaranties a HBD at one dollar thorough HIVE. No matter what the price of HBD on the external markets is, when a conversion is made on the blockchain from HBD to HIVE, the amount of returned HIVE will be valued at $1 per HBD. This conversion lasts for 3.5 days, and a median price for HIVE is taken in the period.
Because HBD is backed by HIVE, HBD acts as debt of the blockchain.

The debt is calculated in the following manner:

DEBT = HBD in circulation / HIVE Market Cap 
HIVE Market cap = HIVE Virtual supply * Feed price 
HBD In circulation = Total HBD – DHF Holdings 

The haircut happens when the debt of the blockchain is higher than the predetermined limit by the blockchain. At the moment this limit is set at 30%.

When the debt limit is reached the blockchain no longer guaranties a one dollar HBD. The highest the debt the lowest the price for HBD from the blockchain.

HBD Printing Limits

Prior to the last Hardfork in October 2022 the HBD print limits were set to 9% and 10% debt level. Most of the Hivers were aware about the 10% limit, when HBD is no longer valued at $1.
After the Hardfork these debt limits were moved to 20% and 30%.

But what exactly happens at these debt levels?
The major thing is that HBD will deppeg and lose the pair to the dollar. But there are a few other details to be aware of.

First let’s take a look at all the ways HBD is printed:

  • Author rewards
  • Conversions
  • Interest
  • DHF payouts

HBD Added/Removed From Circulation By Category

Here is the chart.

As we can see, in the past HBD was added in circulation only trough authors rewards and removed with conversions. Also, those conversions were only one way, HBD can only be removed and not added with conversions.

From 2021 we can see more dynamic on HBD side. First the stabilizer started working in 2021 and at first it started adding HBD in circulation because of inflated HBD prices. Later, in August 2021 there was much more HBD added in circulation when HIVE to HBD conversions were enabled. Since then, both, conversions from regular users, and the @hbdstabilizer has mostly been removing HBD from circulation, although in the last months there was some opposite movements.

The current summary for the HBD supply looks like this.

CategoryHBD
Author rewards30,682,876
DHFPayouts3,872,006
Interest998,384
Other-291,877
Conversions-11,459,117
Stabilizer-11,955,249
**Total11,847,023**

Things that are starting to take effect at 20% debt limit

First and most important HBD is still valued at one dollar at this limit and users can convert HBD to HIVE for a dollar worth of HIVE. But what is happening to the HBD printing?

Author rewards At 20% the HBD author rewards stop being printed and all the rewards are paid in HIVE only. This is changed from the previous setup, where there was a slow transition in the payouts from HIVE to HBD. In the range of 9% to 10%, authors received liquid HIVE and HBD, depending how high the debt was. Now there is no transition zone and when the 20% is reached, authors stop receiving HBD as payouts. A sharp cut off. No new HBD printed from authors rewards.

Conversions HBD can be created from conversions as well, converting HIVE to HBD. When the debt reaches 20% these conversions are disabled and are no longer effective. Meaning no more HBD can be created from conversions. Here I want to add a note on the @hbdstabilizer. Not sure how will the stabilizer operate in conditions when the debt is high. I would guess that it will temporarily stop operating, because there is no point in providing liquidity when the peg is broken by design.

HBD Interest What about the interest that is paid for HBD held in savings? The interest is not affected at 20% debt, and it is continued to be paid out. Although the interest rate is set by the witnesses, and they can decide at some point to adjust it. So, it is not hard coded but still flexible.

DHF Payouts Another source for HBD are the payouts to proposals. The 20% debt limit has no effect on the payouts, but similar to the HBD interest rate, the DHF payouts are controlled by the stakeholders, and they can vote to remove funding to proposals.


As we can see from the above, at 20% the HBD printing is starting to get reduced, limiting the amount of HBD that is entering circulation. The HBD in circulation is still valued at one dollar. This is like a warning sigh to the blockchain that things are starting to get serious. Although notice that there is still a lot of room between 20% and 30%. Its not like the 9% and 10% as it was previously, meaning there is more room for maneuvering from the stakeholders.

Things that are starting to take effect at 30% debt limit

At 30% debt HBD is set to lose its peg and it is no longer valued at one dollar!

This is the upper limit for HBD printing and when it is reached, HBD will lose its peg, meaning all the HBD to HIVE conversions will no longer be valued at one dollar worth of HIVE.

Author rewards are all paid in HIVE, HIVE to HBD conversions are disabled, while HBD interest and the DHF payouts are left up to the witnesses and stakeholders to decide about.

What price will the blockchain value HBD after the 30% debt limit is reached?

This depends how high the debt is. If the debt is higher, the HBD price will be lower.
Example table:

Debt levelHBD On Chain Price
< 30%1.00
40%0.75
50%0.60
60%0.50

As we can see from the table, for a debt level between 30% and 40%, the HBD on chain price will be in the range of 0.75 to 1.00. For a debt level higher than 50%, the HBD on chain price is closing on the 50 cents mark.

What usually happens when the debt increases and HBD is close to the haircut limit, or above it, more HBD is starting to be converted to HIVE, as users exit it, and the HBD supply drops.
As the HBD supply drops so does the debt level. In this way, the debt limit provides a balancing for the system as it forces users to exit HBD and reduce its supply. At the end it all depends on the price of HIVE.

HBD Circulating Supply

When we sum the positve and negative numbers from the previous chart the HBD supply looks like this.

Note that this supply doesn’t include the HBD in the DHF. This is the HBD supply that is used when calculating the debt.
We are now around 11M HBD in circulation. For the most of the 2022, the HBD supply was contracting, while we have seen a small expansion in 2023. It is still far from the ATH back in 2021, when there was 23M HBD in circulation.

Hive Debt

The chart for the debt looks like this.

The red line represents the debt limits, and as we can see they have been increased on two occasions. The last one is a more drastic move from 10% to 30%. This has provided more room for the HBD supply and we are now far from the debt ceiling. The current debt is around 6%, while the limit is 30%.

We can see that there was debt limit was reached in 2018 for a short period of time when it comes to 17% and especially in 2019 when it reached 15% for a period of couple of months.

HBD On Chain Price VS Debt

The chart looks like this.

Note that this is not the HBD market price, but the on chain price, that the blockchain gives when HBD to HIVE conversions are made.

We can see the drop in HBD on chain price, as debt limits were broken. First back in December 2018 with a sharp drop and sharp recovery in a month period. Then again in the second half od 2019. As the debt level reached 16% in these periods, the HBD on chain price dropped to 60 cents.
As market conditions improved, the debt dropped and the HBD price recovered.

Since the Hive fork, back in March 2020, till today, a full three years, HBD has not lost its peg.

HIVE Market And Debt Support Price

A bit more easier way to check the HBD health is to look at the HIVE price that supports the current HBD market cap. This is the price to which HIVE can drop and there wont be a haircut in the HBD peg, for the current HBD supply.

Here we can notice the sharp drop in the price back in 2018, when the HIVE price dropped below the support levels. As the HIVE price drops, HBD is started to being converted to HIVE and removed from circulation, reducing the HBD supply and pushing the support price lower.

We can note a bit of unusual situation in 2021, when the red line had a spike. This is due to the increase in the supply of HBD. The HIVE to HBD conversions were enabled at this point, and when the HBD prices increased, users were making arbitrage and creating HBD.

Overall from the above we can notice, while the HIVE market price has dropped bellow the debt support level, it has never dropped significantly bellow that. Whenever this happens, HBD is getting destroyed and the support levels drops as well.

When we zoom in 2022 – 2023 we get this:

We can notice the drop in the support price in October 2022, from 20 cents down to 7 cents. This is because of the increase in the debt limit from 10% to 30%. Since then, we are hovering in the range of 6 to 8 cents, support price for the HBD in circulation, while the HIVE market price has been in the range of 30 to 50 cents.


Summary

The main changes for the Haircut rule is the increase in the debt limit from 10% to 30%. The other change is that there is now a lot more room in the transition period so to speak, from 20% to 30%, unlike the previous 9% to 10%.
When the debt limit reaches 20%, HBD is still valued at $1, but the HBD issuing is limited, no HBD author rewards and no HIVE to HBD conversions. This limits the HBD supply as a first step in preventing HBD deppeg. If this is not enough, then at 30% HBD will deppeg in a controlled manner.
In the past, HBD, formerly SBD has lost its peg on two occasions, but also has recovered from there.

At the moment HBD is in a healthy spot, with a debt level of 6% far from the 30% limit. The support price is also much lower than the market price, a 8 cents vs the 40 cents market price. Thing is if HIVE market price drops, so will the HBD supply and this will further push the support price lower, as we have seen it happened in the past.

Since the Hive fork, a three years ago HBD has not entered in deppeging event, but quite the contrary it had a market pumps on the upside. This doesn’t means it wont happen again, but at least we know that there is a mechanics in place to prevent death spiral and LUNA, UST scenario. Apart from the debt limit and the HBD deppeg by design, the price oracle for the conversions, that is 3.5 days long is another safety mechanism as it prevents instant and violent price actions to have a significant effect on the conversions.

All the best @dalz

Posted Using LeoFinance Beta