For years, stablecoins were the boring corner of crypto. They were the “cash in the system” — a parking lot between trades, not something you’d actively “invest” in. But as the market matures and yields, regulations, and risk profiles change, more people are asking a surprisingly non‑trivial question:
Should stablecoins like Tether (USDT) be viewed as investments — or just tools?
In this piece, I’ll walk through how I think about stablecoins in a 2026 portfolio, why they matter strategically, and where they absolutely should not be treated like classic growth assets.
Most people meet stablecoins for the first time as a dollar substitute on an exchange. You sell Bitcoin, you get USDT or USDC. Simple.
But in a real portfolio, stablecoins play at least three distinct roles:
Notice what’s missing from that list: “long‑term compounding engine.” Stablecoins are not designed to 10x. They are designed not to move much at all.
That doesn’t mean they’re boring. It just means their value is mainly in flexibility and optionality, not price appreciation.
On paper, a fully backed dollar stablecoin should behave like cash in a bank account. In practice, every stablecoin carries a unique stack of risks:
Tether (USDT) is a good example. It’s the most liquid and widely used stablecoin on the planet, but also one of the most controversial. It has:
So the core investor question isn’t “Will USDT go to 2 dollars?” — it’s “Am I being compensated appropriately for the non‑zero risk that it might break?”
If you’re using USDT purely as a transactional tool and short‑term parking, your tolerance for these risks is one thing. If you’re holding a large, long‑term position in it hoping for yield, that’s a very different bet.
If you want a deeper dive specifically into Tether’s risk/return profile and future pricing scenarios, there’s a useful breakdown in this Tether price prediction and investment analysis.
There are scenarios where treating stablecoins as a deliberate allocation actually makes sense.
Holding 5–15% of your portfolio in stablecoins can:
In this case, you’re not “investing in USDT” so much as investing in the option to act quickly.
On CeFi platforms, DeFi protocols, and tokenized treasuries, you can often earn yield on stablecoin deposits. This turns a non‑yielding dollar proxy into something closer to a short‑duration income asset.
But here you’re stacking multiple risks:
The right mental model: you’re not just taking “stablecoin risk.” You’re taking platform + product + regulatory risk in addition to the underlying asset.
If the rest of your portfolio is packed with leveraged DeFi, small‑cap altcoins, and options, intentionally holding 20–30% in stablecoins can be the difference between “painful drawdown” and “forced liquidation.”
In that sense, stablecoins can be a defensive asset — not because they are risk‑free, but because they’re less correlated with speculative blow‑offs than your other tokens.
There are also clear situations where thinking of stablecoins as “investments” is misleading or flat‑out dangerous.
Stablecoins can be incredibly useful. But they are poor vehicles for people expecting high, equity‑like returns on autopilot.
Putting this together, here’s how I’d personally categorize Tether today:
If you want detailed scenario modeling around Tether’s future, including price stability assumptions and whether it can be considered “a good investment” under different conditions, it’s worth reading this analysis on Tether price prediction and investment merits.
The honest answer: they’re both — but only if you treat them that way deliberately.
For most people:
If you approach stablecoins with that mental model, you can use them intelligently without expecting them to be something they were never designed to be.
— Azalea ❤
Should You Treat Stablecoins Like Investments in 2026? was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


