Ethena’s USDe supply on Solana rises by over $450M in 4 days
The synthetic dollar's explosive growth on Solana puts it at nearly ten times the supply on HyperliquidX, signaling a major shift in stablecoin liquidity across chains.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 16, 2026Ethena’s synthetic dollar USDe just had a very good week on Solana. The token’s supply on the network surged by more than $450 million in just four days, a pace of capital inflow that most DeFi protocols would be thrilled to see over an entire quarter.
The growth is particularly striking in relative terms. USDe’s supply on Solana is now approaching ten times the amount circulating on HyperliquidX, making Solana the clear center of gravity for USDe liquidity outside of Ethereum.
What’s behind the surge
USDe isn’t your typical stablecoin. It’s a synthetic dollar created by Ethena Labs, which launched the token in February 2024. Unlike USDC or USDT, which are backed by traditional reserves held in bank accounts, USDe maintains its peg through a delta-neutral hedging strategy. Think of it like this: Ethena holds crypto collateral and simultaneously opens short positions to offset price risk, producing a dollar-equivalent value without needing actual dollars in a vault.
Advertisement " document.getElementById("alkimi-leaderboard").innerHTML = iFrame var iframeDoc = document.getElementById(idIFrame).contentWindow.document pbjs.renderAd(iframeDoc, highestCpmBids[0].adId); } } setTimeout(function () { renderAds(); }, FAILSAFE_TIMEOUT);That model has clearly resonated. Within roughly a year of launch, USDe climbed to become the third-largest dollar-pegged asset in all of DeFi. By April 2025, the total USDe supply had reached approximately $4.7 billion, with 70% of its backing held in liquid stablecoins and a 101% collateralization ratio.
The token’s multi-chain ambitions are powered by LayerZero’s Omnichain Fungible Token (OFT) standard. USDe can move seamlessly across blockchains without the messy bridging hacks that have plagued crypto for years. The token has been deployed on more than 10 chains, achieving roughly $50 million in weekly cross-chain volume since its launch.
What this means for investors
USDe’s delta-neutral strategy depends on funding rates in perpetual futures markets remaining consistently positive. When funding flips negative for extended periods, the mechanism that generates yield starts working in reverse, and Ethena has to draw on its insurance fund to maintain the peg. The 101% collateralization ratio provides a thin buffer, but it’s not the kind of over-collateralization that makes a token crisis-proof.
There’s also concentration risk to consider. When nearly 10 times more USDe sits on Solana than on HyperliquidX, a Solana-specific disruption could create outsized stress on USDe redemption mechanisms. Diversification across chains is supposed to mitigate this, but rapid capital concentration on a single network somewhat undermines that benefit.
Investors watching this space should track two things closely. First, whether the Solana USDe supply stabilizes at these levels or continues to grow. Second, how Ethena’s collateral composition evolves. The fact that 70% of backing is currently in liquid stables is reassuring, but that ratio could shift as the protocol scales and market conditions change.
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