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Digital currency company Circle says it’s changing the makeup of its dollar-pegged stablecoin’s reserves to just cash and U.S. Treasury bonds. CNBC reports: Digital currency company Circle had claimed its stablecoin, USD Coin, was backed 1:1 by actual dollars in a bank account. In July, it was revealed this was no longer the case, with Circle disclosing in an “attestation” from auditors Grant Thornton that cash made up just over 60% of USD Coin’s reserves. The other 40% was backed by various forms of debt securities and bonds. Now, Circle says it’s changing the makeup of USD Coin’s reserves once again, with just cash and U.S. Treasury bonds underpinning the stablecoin.

Centre, a consortium founded by Circle and crypto exchange Coinbase which developed the stablecoin, unveiled the change on Sunday. “Mindful of community sentiment, our commitment to trust and transparency, and an evolving regulatory landscape, Circle, with the support of Centre and Coinbase, has announced that it will now hold the USDC reserve entirely in cash and short duration US Treasuries,” Centre said in a blog post. “These changes are being implemented expeditiously and will be reflected in future attestations by Grant Thornton.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.