I've seen posts from some users who sold their crypto assets (bitcoin) in anticipation of the upcoming market falls. Or those who sold their crypto assets (bitcoin) earlier with profit, at $100k+. I assume most converted to stablecoins like USDT and others. I have a question for these users. Aren't you afraid of keeping your assets in USDT (a centralized financial services like a bank) for the entire bitcoin bearish period, which, as usual, lasts several years, meaning quite a long time, for the subsequent purchase of bitcoin.
To take profit as a Bitcoin holder, there's no way we won't deal with stablecoin at some point, and the same thing applies to you unless you want to sell your BTC at a low price, which is something that happened to me weeks ago when the market suddenly downtrended and I learned a pretty good lesson.
Having said that, USDT is not the stablecoin we have in the market, though it's the most popular and most used, but when we said stablecoins, we are technically talking about all stablecoins in the market, and for the record, it's not all stablecoins that are centralized.
Stablecoins is fundamentally no different from a bank, but in this case, "depositors" are less protected (at least in banks, deposits are insured and will be compensated by the state in case of force majeure, in theory)? Stablecoins could collapse, go bankrupt, i.e....anything could happen.
Let me repeat: how do you console yourself (calm yourself and drive away fear) when storing your assets (temporarily) in stablecoins?

Remember the story with UST, and LUNA in the Terra ecosystem?
Honestly, the collapse of UST is clearly written for those that can see it right from the beginning because 99% of all stablecoin claims to be backed by BTC are hype, and that's i never trust the UST concern nor do i hold LUNA.
I prefer a stablecoin that was created by a reputable DeFi platform whose model of operation is quite different from centralized platform and traditional system operation.
In my opinion, storing assets in stablecoins is like "walking on very thin ice" - you never know when will fall through the ice.
Stablecoins are not an asset, and there's no way anyone can store an asset in it once they have already taken profit from their BTC investment.
P.S. Tether (USDT) plans to conduct an audit (it's been promising to do so for the past five years) and will hire KPMG to audit the financial statements and PwC to review the company's internal quality control systems. What if the audit reveals "curious" nuances that could bring down this stablecoin? As a reminder, Tether has never conducted an audit in its entire existence, and it's unclear what's going on behind the scenes.
USDT getting PwC to help strengthen internal systems and help in making preparations for their audit could mean they have nothing to be panicked about. Besides, i hear a rumor that they have conducts a full audit this month with KPMG.