Synthetix’s sUSD Depegging Explained: Governance Changes to blame
A new report from Parsec, an on-chain analytics firm, sheds light on the recent depegging of Synthetix’s stablecoin, sUSD. Contrary to initial fears, the issue isn’t due to bad debt or protocol failure. Instead, it’s a result of a governance upgrade called SIP-420.
sUSD, designed to stay at $1, is now trading around $0.90. Parsec’s analysis shows this decline started after SIP-420 was implemented. This upgrade aimed to simplify staking and boost capital efficiency for the Synthetix (SNX) protocol.
SIP-420 introduced a shared staking pool, replacing the old system where individual SNX holders managed thier own debt. This change lowered the collateralization ratio from 500% to 200%, making it easier for users. Though, it also removed the incentive for stakers to defend the peg.
- Stakers no longer have personal debt to manage.
- Ther’s no motivation to buy sUSD when it’s off-peg.
Additionally,over $80 million in SNX entered the shared pool,and a campaign by Infinex increased sUSD supply. Some Curve pools now contain over 90% sUSD, with little demand to absorb the excess. this lack of buying pressure has caused the price to drop.
The Synthetix team views this as a “transition period” and is working on solutions. They plan to integrate with Aave and Ethena to create new demand and boost Curve incentives. Despite these efforts, the Parsec report highlights a tradeoff: while SIP-420 improved scalability, it removed a key stabilizer for sUSD.