High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Editor's Pick

Liquidity drain causes Solana-based USX stablecoin to depeg to $0.1

by admin December 26, 2025
December 26, 2025

The Solana ecosystem is facing fresh turbulence after USX stablecoin, a synthetic stablecoin issued by Solstice, suffered a sharp but temporary depeg on secondary markets.

The incident has reignited concerns around liquidity management, even as the issuer and independent analysts stress that USX’s collateral backing remained intact.

Sudden sell pressure rattles secondary markets

USX began losing its peg in the early hours of December 26, with market watchers noting unusual price movements shortly after 01:45 UTC.

Sell pressure on decentralised exchanges, particularly Orca and Raydium, quickly overwhelmed available liquidity, and as pools were drained, the stablecoin’s price slipped well below its intended $1 mark.

At the height of the disruption, USX reportedly traded as low as $0.1 on thin secondary markets, according to blockchain security firm PeckShield.

PeckShieldAlert

@PeckShieldAlert

·Follow

#PeckShieldAlert The stablecoin $USX on #Solana suffered a temporary depeg, dropping to $0.1 on secondary markets due to a liquidity drain.
The peg was subsequently restored to $0.94 after
@solsticefi injected liquidity.

8:54 am · 26 Dec 2025

89

Reply

Read 11 replies

Other traders and analysts observed prices in the $0.79 to $0.92 range as volatility rippled across Solana-based trading venues.

The wide variation underscored how fragmented liquidity and panic-driven selling distorted the price discovery process.

However, the depeg was confined to secondary markets, where the USX stablecoin trades freely on DEXs.

These venues rely on liquidity providers rather than guaranteed redemption mechanisms.

As sellers rushed to exit positions, arbitrage failed to stabilise prices quickly, allowing the discount to deepen before support arrived.

Solstice steps in to restore the USX stablecoin stability

Solstice acknowledged the volatility within hours and moved to address the imbalance.

At approximately 04:30 UTC, the team and its partners began injecting fresh liquidity into the affected pools.

On-chain data confirmed the intervention, and prices responded almost immediately.

Following the liquidity injection, USX’s price rebounded sharply, and the stablecoin began trading closer to parity.

Market data later showed the stablecoin hovering between $0.94 and $0.99, with some reports placing it near $0.987.

While the peg was not restored cleanly in a single move, stability gradually returned as depth improved.

Solstice has emphasised that the incident did not stem from a failure of backing.

Solstice has also stated that assets under custody remained unaffected and that USX stayed over 100% collateralized throughout the episode.

According to the team, the core protocol functioned as designed, and the disruption was purely a secondary market event.

The issuer also highlighted the distinction between primary and secondary markets. Institutional partners with permissioned access can mint and redeem USX directly at a 1:1 ratio, subject to KYC requirements.

Retail users, however, depend entirely on DEX liquidity, which can deviate from peg during periods of stress.

Questions linger despite the prompt intervention

Despite the swift response, the sharpness of the depeg raised eyebrows across the crypto community.

For some users, the damage was already done. Those who sold USX during the downturn locked in losses, as secondary market trades are final. Others who bought at a discount benefited from arbitrage opportunities created by the dislocation.

Although temporary depegs are not uncommon, a drop of this magnitude exposed vulnerabilities in how liquidity is distributed relative to circulating supply.

casinokrisa

@casinokrisa

·Follow

Replying to @PeckShieldAlert

Temporary depegs often signal liquidity management issues, even if collateral remains intact. Watch for recurring volatility.

11:03 am · 26 Dec 2025

0

Reply

Read more on Twitter

Several traders warned that reliance on manual intervention could amplify risk if market conditions worsen.

Actually, panic selling continued even after prices recovered, suggesting lingering unease among holders.

Some users even publicly compared the event to past stablecoin failures, including the collapse of Terra’s UST, though analysts stressed the comparison was flawed.

However, the USX stablecoin is neither algorithmic nor reliant on reflexive mint-and-burn mechanics, and its backing did not unravel.

Solstice has, however, countered the narrative by promising greater transparency.

The company has said that it has requested an immediate third-party attestation to verify reserves and pledged to deepen secondary market liquidity to reduce the chance of a repeat event, and stated that monthly proof-of-solvency reports are already available.

The post Liquidity drain causes Solana-based USX stablecoin to depeg to $0.1 appeared first on Invezz

previous post
Uniswap community passes UNIfication proposal, 100M UNI set to be burnt
next post
Trust Wallet just got hacked on Christmas, $7M drained

You may also like

FTX whistleblower Caroline Ellison set for early release...

December 26, 2025

Trust Wallet just got hacked on Christmas, $7M...

December 26, 2025

Looking ahead to 2026: why hyperscalers can’t slow...

December 26, 2025

Uniswap community passes UNIfication proposal, 100M UNI set...

December 26, 2025

Can Saudi Arabia really undercut the world on...

December 26, 2025

Best copper stocks to buy as prices continue...

December 26, 2025

QuantumScape stock price forecast for 2026: Will QS...

December 26, 2025

Why 2025 was crypto’s year of wins, yet...

December 26, 2025

Herbalife stock price rebounded in 2025: will the...

December 26, 2025

Wall Street close: S&P 500 ends at record...

December 25, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • FTX whistleblower Caroline Ellison set for early release next month

    December 26, 2025
  • Looking ahead to 2026: why hyperscalers can’t slow spending without losing the AI war 

    December 26, 2025
  • Trust Wallet just got hacked on Christmas, $7M drained

    December 26, 2025
  • Liquidity drain causes Solana-based USX stablecoin to depeg to $0.1

    December 26, 2025
  • Uniswap community passes UNIfication proposal, 100M UNI set to be burnt

    December 26, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contacts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Email Whitelisting
High Yield Markets
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick