Ethena Interview: USDe is Not Just a High APY Product, but a System-Level Dollar Infrastructure in the Crypto World

Foresight NewsPublished on 2026-06-10Last updated on 2026-06-10

Abstract

Ethena is building USDe not merely as a high-yield product, but as a fundamental dollar infrastructure layer for the crypto ecosystem. In an interview, the team emphasized that as USDe scales, metrics like collateral usage, velocity, and integration depth within DeFi and CeFi will become more important than its APY. Ethena is diversifying USDe's collateral beyond crypto basis trades to include stablecoins, DeFi/ institutional lending, and RWAs, but with strict boundaries to maintain its core identity as a predictable synthetic dollar. The project views capacity limits as a market structure issue, triggered when its hedging activity starts negatively impacting funding rates or concentrating risk. While USDe is gaining adoption as crypto-native collateral, its next challenge is becoming a core dollar asset for broader institutions, which requires building trust in its stability, liquidity, and simple risk structure under stress. Ethena sees its future role as a hybrid—part savings account, part offshore dollar system—acting as a programmable dollar balance sheet and potentially the underlying yield engine for other platforms.


Author: Four Pillars

Compiled by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News


Key Points


Ethena does not believe USDe should be understood solely through its APY. If USDe truly functions as intended, more important metrics will be collateral utilization rate, velocity, utility, and the depth of its integration across DeFi and CeFi.


Collateral diversification is not about turning USDe into a high-risk, high-return product. Ethena's explicit goal is to maintain USDe's core behavior as a predictable synthetic dollar while expanding its sources of yield.


The team views the capacity problem as a market structure issue, not a simple AUM target. USDe reaches its capacity ceiling when Ethena's hedging flows start impacting funding rates, increasing execution costs, or concentrating risk in specific venues and assets.


Future distribution will increasingly be done through exchanges, wallets, protocols, and partner products. Ethena may become the underlying yield engine for other platforms, but the team is also developing products that retain direct user relationships.


The next level of collateral ceiling depends on market trust. For USDe to become a core dollar collateral, institutions need confidence in its redemption integrity, peg stability, liquidity, and that its risk structure is simple enough to be effectively underwritten.


The "Quirky Inventions" of Crypto


The most important products in crypto often originate from "quirky native inventions." Bitcoin was first internet money before becoming a macro asset; stablecoins were initially exchange settlement chips before becoming the dollar rails for crypto; perpetual swaps were a stopgap for futures contracts before becoming the mainstream venue for global crypto leverage. The pattern we see is that crypto always finds market structures poorly served by TradFi, then invents primitives better suited for internet-native capital.


Ethena is currently one of the clearest tests of this pattern. USDe started as a synthetic dollar backed by crypto basis trading, while sUSDe offered users a yield-bearing dollar asset. The market initially understood this product primarily through funding rates, APY, and crypto-native collateral demand.


Today, its collateral scope has expanded to include liquid stablecoins, DeFi lending, institutional lending, RWA, Prime lending, and commodity/equity basis strategies. This brings Ethena increasingly closer to a programmable dollar balance sheet, capable of flexibly deploying across different venues, counterparties, collateral types, and market environments.


The recent Anchorage and Coinbase collaborations further underscore this: Anchorage brings regulated custody and collateral management to Ethena's institutional lending stack; Coinbase provides a distribution channel that could bring Ethena-powered savings products to audiences far beyond DeFi-native users. One strengthens the asset side, the other expands the distribution side.


The Janus Henderson collaboration addresses both simultaneously: the $480 billion AUM manager brings its AAA CLO strategy (JAAA) into USDe's collateral via Centrifuge, becoming the first non-US Treasury RWA collateral; additionally, Janus Henderson has taken a strategic stake in ENA, incorporated USDe into its own treasury, and is exploring distributing USDe through exchange-traded products.


In the future, Ethena may not neatly fit into any existing category. It might be partly like a money market product, partly like an offshore dollar system, partly like a balance sheet provider for savings products on other platforms, or it might become something the crypto world has never seen before.


We asked the team directly.


Interview Content


Q1. You have described sUSDe as a yield-bearing dollar/ quasi-fixed income asset. For Ethena, is the ultimate goal to be closer to a money market fund, an offshore dollar bank, a financial company's balance sheet, a neutral reserve layer for DeFi/CeFi, or something that doesn't exist yet? What is the first concrete signal that Ethena is starting to step into this role?


Viewing sUSDe as a productive dollar or quasi-fixed income asset is directionally correct, but it's difficult to directly map Ethena to a single traditional financial institution.


In the early stages, it might resemble more of a savings vault—a dollar asset with staking yield. But as the system scales, its role will extend far beyond just a savings product. USDe will gradually begin to function as a system-level asset, connecting liquidity, collateral, hedging, and trading infrastructure within crypto markets.


Therefore, Ethena will not converge into one specific model but will evolve into a combination of multiple functions. In some aspects, it will resemble a savings account; in others, it will act like an offshore dollar system native to the crypto market.


A more important question is not which category Ethena belongs to, but what role USDe plays in the broader financial system. If USDe is widely used as collateral across DeFi and CeFi, then over time, metrics like velocity, utility, and integration depth will become more important than APY.


At that point, the system will look less like a standalone product and more like a financial coordination layer for the digital dollar.


Q2. USDe's collateral is expanding from crypto basis to liquid stablecoins, DeFi lending, institutional lending, RWA, Prime lending, and commodity/equity basis. What is the line you won't cross? Even if a certain type of exposure could increase sUSDe's APY and market share, would you reject it if it alters the nature of USDe?


Expanding USDe's collateral range means broadening the markets and yield sources supporting the system, but it doesn't mean every type of exposure is acceptable. The core goal is not simply to maximize returns but to maintain USDe's consistent risk profile as a synthetic dollar asset.


The line isn't defined by a specific asset class, but rather when an exposure starts changing USDe's fundamental behavior. If an asset introduces highly asymmetric volatility, risks that are difficult to hedge, or liquidity and liquidation risks directly conflicting with system stability, that would fall outside the framework we aim to maintain.


Even if a strategy could temporarily boost sUSDe's APY or accelerate growth, it wouldn't be worth it if it caused USDe to behave less like a predictable synthetic dollar and more like a directional or structurally fragile product.


The key question isn't whether the yield is attractive, but whether the system can still function the same way without that specific exposure. The structure must remain resilient.


Therefore, any collateral expansion should be diversification within the same risk framework, not a deviation from it. Once an opportunity begins to dilute USDe's core identity and reliability, returns alone are not enough reason to add it.


Q3. If Ethena becomes one of the world's largest systematic basis allocators, at what scale does its position shift from being a passive yield harvester to a market-impact participant? How do you view capacity constraints from factors like spot liquidity, perpetual open interest, funding rate reflexivity, venue concentration, and liquidation depth? What signal tells you that adding one more dollar of USDe supply is starting to lower, rather than raise, the network's risk-adjusted return?


When Ethena grows into a large-scale basis allocator, the shift from a passive yield strategy to a market-impact participant isn't defined by a specific AUM threshold, but rather when the system begins to affect market structure itself.


At a smaller scale, flows are small relative to overall market liquidity, and the system primarily "harvests" funding rates and basis passively. But when the hedging position becomes a significant part of the total open interest for certain assets' perpetuals, funding rates themselves start reacting to the flow of Ethena's positions. At that point, the system isn't just extracting basis from the market but starts directly influencing liquidity and market dynamics.


Capacity should be seen as a system constrained by multiple factors, including total perpetual open interest, funding rate reflexivity, and venue concentration. These aren't just variables affecting returns; they determine how much scale the market can absorb without creating structural distortions.


The signal that new USDe supply no longer has an incremental effect is relatively clear. For example, if new issuance consistently leads to marginal funding rate compression, structurally higher hedging execution costs and slippage, or greater funding rate instability, it indicates scale is starting to impair efficiency. Increased dependency on specific exchanges or assets is also a significant signal.


Ultimately, the limit isn't defined by AUM itself, but by the moment when adding one more dollar of USDe starts materially changing the funding rate and liquidity structures of the very markets it relies on.


Q4. USDe is increasingly accessed through exchange, wallet, protocol, and partner interfaces. As distribution broadens, will Ethena retain customer relationships and profits, or will it become the balance sheet infrastructure for other platforms' yield products?


The answer isn't entirely one-sided.


In the early stages, Ethena controls more of the user relationship and distribution economics. But as adoption scales, Ethena will increasingly play the role of an underlying yield engine, while exchanges, wallets, and apps wrap that yield into their own products and experiences.


Ethena is developing products that can both broaden USDe distribution and allow it to retain a direct customer relationship. More details will be announced soon.


Q5. USDe has proven that DeFi and parts of CeFi will integrate it. The harder question is the next level of collateral ceiling. What needs to change for USDe to transition from a crypto-native collateral to an asset that exchanges, fintech companies, prime brokers, or institutions see as a core dollar collateral? What is the biggest hurdle: risk, regulation, liquidity, redemption assumptions, or the "money-good" status of USDC/USDT?


USDe has already proven there is strong demand for a crypto-native dollar asset within DeFi and parts of CeFi. The bigger question now is whether it can evolve from an asset used primarily as crypto collateral to one that the market views as a core dollar collateral.


This transition isn't just about scale; it's about trust and market behavior. Institutions need confidence that the asset can reliably maintain redemption integrity and peg stability even under stressed market conditions. Ethena has weathered multiple industry black swan events, and the more we experience, the more trust in USDe solidifies.


Another crucial factor is simplicity of risk structure. Institutional collateral frameworks typically prefer transparent and easily understood risk profiles. The harder a structure is to model or explain, the harder it is to be seen as foundational collateral.


This transition will likely happen gradually: first through DeFi, then broader CeFi adoption, then integration into regulated fintech, and ultimately into more institutional collateral frameworks.


Q6. Guy has stated that prematurely maximizing monetization is less important than making USDe the dominant dollar asset first. But if the best version of Ethena is a low-monetization, large-scale distributed balance sheet product, how should ENA holders evaluate value capture? When does the strategy of "keeping monetization low to foster growth" stop being the right answer?


In the early stages, prioritizing distribution over take rate is important because the goal isn't short-term revenue maximization but establishing USDe as a standardized dollar infrastructure asset. At this stage, scale itself becomes the primary driver of the system's long-term economic structure.


Concluding Thoughts


USDC and USDT cannot be the end of crypto dollars. They are necessary—they are liquid, widely trusted, and widely distributed. But structurally, they are passive. They simply transfer value on-chain, without transforming crypto's own market structures into a productive balance sheet.


USDe starts from a completely different premise. The crypto world has its own unique sources of dollar yield: funding markets, collateral demand, hedging flows, basis, leverage, liquidity fragmentation, and ultimately, institutional credit. Ethena converts these internal mechanics into a dollar asset users can hold, stake, trade, and integrate.


That's why USDe is genuinely innovative—it's one of the few projects attempting to build a dollar asset from within crypto's own financial system, rather than simply importing dollars from the traditional banking system. That's also why this interview was worth doing.

Related Questions

QAccording to the interview, how does Ethena view USDe beyond just being a high APY product?

AEthena views USDe as a system-level dollar infrastructure for the crypto world. More important metrics than APY will be collateral utilization rate, velocity, utility, and the depth of its integration across DeFi and CeFi.

QWhat is Ethena's goal regarding USDe's collateral diversification, as stated in the article?

AEthena's explicit goal is to maintain USDe's core behavior as a predictable synthetic dollar while expanding its sources of yield. Diversification is not about making USDe a high-risk, high-reward product.

QHow does the team define the capacity limit for USDe, as per the interview?

AThe team views capacity as a market structure issue, not a simple AUM target. The limit is reached when Ethena's hedging flow begins to affect funding rates, increase execution costs, or concentrate risk in specific venues and assets.

QWhat needs to happen for USDe to become a core dollar collateral asset for institutions, according to Ethena?

AInstitutions need confidence in its redemption integrity, peg stability, liquidity, and a risk structure that is simple enough to be effectively underwritten. Trust and market behavior are key for this transition from a crypto-native collateral asset.

QWhat is described as the key structural difference between USDe and stablecoins like USDC/USDT in the conclusion?

AUSDC and USDT are passive, simply transferring value on-chain. USDe is innovative because it attempts to build a dollar asset from within crypto's own financial system, transforming internal mechanisms like funding markets and hedging flows into a productive balance sheet, rather than just importing dollars from traditional banking.

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