Falcon Finance’s Falcon USD (USDf) lost its dollar peg on Tuesday amid falling liquidity, collateral quality concerns and accusations of mismanagement.
Falcon USD (USDf), a synthetic overcollateralized stablecoin issued by decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Falcon Finance, dropped below its intended $1 peg on Tuesday amid rising concerns over liquidity and collateral quality.
CoinMarketCap data shows that Falcon USD (USDf) fell as low as $0.9783 on Tueday morning. The drop triggered fresh scrutiny from the DeFi community, with some industry observers questioning the token’s backing and governance.
Obchakevich Research founder Alex Obchakevich told Cointelegraph that he is “concerned about the situation,” adding that rumors of collateral quality issues have undermined investor confidence.
Unlike fiat-backed stablecoins such as USDC (USDC) or USDt (USDT), Falcon USD is not directly pegged by US dollar deposits in bank accounts and is instead minted by locking up digital assets, including volatile cryptocurrencies.
Blockchain data explorer Parsec reported on X that onchain liquidity for USDf has declined. Parsec data indicates that liquidity stands at $5.51 million at the time of writing.