If you are new to cryptocurrency, you have probably heard that stablecoins are the “safe” part of the crypto world — digital tokens designed to maintain a steady value of one dollar. They are used for trading, earning yield, and moving money between exchanges without the volatility of Bitcoin or Ethereum. But the March 22, 2025 exploit of Resolv’s USR stablecoin, which lost its dollar peg and crashed to $0.025 before partially recovering, is a stark reminder that “stable” does not mean “risk-free.” This guide explains what happened, why it matters, and how you can protect yourself when using stablecoins in your crypto journey.
The Basics
A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency designed to maintain a fixed value, usually one US dollar. There are several types of stablecoins, and understanding the differences is crucial for anyone holding them. Fiat-backed stablecoins like USDT and USDC hold actual dollars in bank accounts as collateral. Crypto-backed stablecoins like DAI and the now-exploited USR use other cryptocurrencies as collateral, often with over-collateralization to absorb price swings. Algorithmic stablecoins use smart contract mechanisms to maintain their peg without direct collateral backing.
Each type carries different risks. Fiat-backed stablecoins face regulatory and banking risks — what happens if the bank holding the reserves fails? Crypto-backed stablecoins face smart contract risks — what if the code managing the collateral has a vulnerability, as happened with USR? Algorithmic stablecoins face the most complex risks, as the TerraUSD collapse in 2022 demonstrated when the entire mechanism broke down and the token became essentially worthless.
The USR stablecoin from Resolv fell into the crypto-backed category. It used a delta-neutral strategy, holding ETH and BTC positions while using perpetual futures to hedge against price movements. This is more complex than simply holding dollars in a bank, which means more things can go wrong.
Why It Matters
On March 22, 2025, an attacker exploited a vulnerability in USR’s minting contract and created 80 million tokens that had no real backing. Think of it like someone printing counterfeit dollars — except in this case, the counterfeit tokens were indistinguishable from real ones on the blockchain. The attacker then sold these fake tokens for real ones, extracting approximately $25 million in ETH.
The result was catastrophic for USR holders. The token’s price on Curve Finance, a popular decentralized exchange, crashed from $1.00 to $0.025 in just 17 minutes. If you had $1,000 worth of USR, it suddenly became worth $25. The price later recovered to around $0.85, but holders still faced significant losses. Even though Resolv claimed its collateral pool was intact, the supply of tokens had been inflated so dramatically that each remaining token was worth less.
This matters for every crypto user, not just USR holders, because stablecoins are foundational to the entire crypto ecosystem. They are used as trading pairs on exchanges, as collateral for loans in DeFi protocols, and as a safe haven during market volatility. When a stablecoin fails, the ripple effects touch every corner of the market. With Bitcoin at $83,800 and Ethereum at $1,980, billions of dollars in stablecoin-denominated positions are at risk if confidence in stablecoins erodes.
Getting Started Guide
If you are just starting with crypto and want to use stablecoins safely, here is a step-by-step approach. First, diversify your stablecoin holdings. Do not put all your stablecoin capital into a single token. Spread it across multiple established stablecoins with different backing mechanisms. If one fails, you are not wiped out.
Second, prioritize transparency. Before holding any stablecoin, check whether the issuer publishes regular audits of their reserves. USDC, issued by Circle, provides monthly attestation reports from major accounting firms. DAI, issued by MakerDAO, has all its collateral visible on-chain. If a stablecoin cannot show you exactly what backs it, treat it with extreme caution.
Third, understand the collateral. For crypto-backed stablecoins, look at what assets back the token and how the collateral ratio is maintained. A stablecoin backed entirely by volatile crypto assets carries more risk than one backed by a mix of crypto and fiat. The USR exploit showed that even sophisticated hedging strategies can fail if the underlying smart contracts have vulnerabilities.
Fourth, monitor your holdings actively. Set up price alerts for any stablecoin you hold. If the price drops below $0.98 or rises above $1.02, something may be wrong. In the USR case, the depeg happened fast — 17 minutes from normal to catastrophic. Speed of response matters.
Common Pitfalls
The biggest mistake newcomers make is chasing yield without understanding the risk. Many DeFi protocols offer attractive interest rates for depositing stablecoins, sometimes exceeding 10 or 20 percent annual yield. These high yields often come from protocols that are taking on significant risk with your funds. The Resolv protocol offered yield through its delta-neutral strategy, but the underlying smart contract vulnerability ultimately cost holders far more than any yield they had earned.
Another common pitfall is assuming that audits guarantee safety. The Resolv protocol had reportedly undergone 14 security audits across five different firms. Audits are valuable, but they are snapshots in time — they verify that the code was correct at the moment of review, not that it will remain secure under all future conditions. The vulnerability that enabled the USR exploit existed despite multiple audits because the auditing process did not adequately test the privileged access controls.
Finally, many users fail to distinguish between the different types of stablecoin risk. Smart contract risk, counterparty risk, regulatory risk, and depeg risk are all distinct threats that require different mitigation strategies. Holding USDC in a hardware wallet addresses counterparty and smart contract risk but not regulatory risk. Providing USDT as liquidity on a decentralized exchange addresses market access but introduces impermanent loss and protocol risk on top of the base stablecoin risk.
Next Steps
Start by reviewing your current stablecoin holdings and assessing the risk profile of each token. Research the backing mechanism, check for recent audits, and look at the issuer’s transparency practices. Consider setting up alerts on CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap for any stablecoin you hold. Join the community channels for your stablecoins on Discord or Telegram to stay informed about protocol updates and potential issues. The crypto market rewards those who take security seriously — and punishes those who do not.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always conduct your own research before making any financial decisions.
USR crashing to 0.025 from a dollar. if you held that thinking it was the safe part of your portfolio you learned a hard lesson
luna 2.0 vibes. different mechanism same result. if your stablecoin can depeg 97 percent its not stable its just labeled that way
luna comparison is lazy. UST was algorithmic with no collateral. USR was overcollateralized but the exploit bypassed the peg mechanism entirely. different failure mode
97 percent drop from peg and people still argue crypto backed stablecoins are safe. the math only works if your collateral never crashes which it always does
good explainer for newcomers. most people dont realize there are different types of stablecoins and each has different risk profiles
the article mentions USDT and USDC as fiat backed. important distinction because those held fine during the whole Resolv mess
Nadia A. usdt and usdc held but usdc depegged to 87 cents during the SVB scare in march 2023. fiat backed doesnt mean invulnerable
97% depeg from a crypto backed stablecoin and somehow people are still surprised. if your collateral is volatile your peg is a suggestion
overcollateralized means nothing if the smart contract has a bug. the collateral was there, the code just let someone walk out with it