Most stablecoin stories are about whether a token is backed by dollars, Treasuries, or bank deposits. Alloy is different. It is designed around over-collateralization with liquid gold exposure, creating a synthetic dollar instrument rather than another straightforward fiat-backed token.
Why Gold-Backed Dollars Are Interesting The Risk Is In The DesignThe appeal is clear: users get a dollar-denominated asset tied to gold collateral, potentially blending the familiarity of stablecoin units with a different reserve base. The caution is just as clear. Synthetic products need users to understand how collateral, redemptions, and market stress interact.
This article is based on information from Tether.




















