- USDD launched natively on Ethereum with 12% APY rewards and PSM support for stablecoin swaps.
- Collateral ratio is 204.5% but heavily tied to TRX, creating potential risks.
- Tether remains dominant, though new rivals and regulatory frameworks are expanding competition.
Justin Sun’s USDD stablecoin has officially expanded to Ethereum, just as the network’s total stablecoin supply climbed past $165 billion. The rollout introduced a Peg Stability Module (PSM), enabling seamless swaps with USDT and USDC, while offering up to 12% APY rewards for early adopters. Though still small compared to Tether’s $169 billion dominance, USDD’s entry signals fresh competition in the $2.5 trillion stablecoin sector.
USDD Yield Incentives and Ethereum Expansion
Originally launched on TRON, USDD is an overcollateralized algorithmic stablecoin designed to maintain a dollar peg while offering high yields. Its Ethereum contract went live on September 8 after a CertiK audit, with the PSM ensuring better liquidity through 1:1 swaps with USDT and USDC. To attract adoption, an airdrop campaign launched September 9, offering 12% APY yields that gradually taper to 6% as adoption scales. Rewards are distributed continuously and claimable every eight hours via the Merkl Dashboard.
USDD Stability, Collateral Ratio, and Risks
At launch, USDD reported a collateral ratio of 204.5%, mainly backed by TRX after Justin Sun withdrew $726 million in Bitcoin collateral in August. While this structure aims to reduce destabilization risk, USDD has faced stress before—falling to $0.983 during Terra’s 2022 collapse and $0.97 during the FTX meltdown. These dips highlight its vulnerability despite collateral protections.
Tether Dominance and Expanding Stablecoin Competition
Tether continues to dominate the market, with TRON alone processing $23–25 billion in daily USDT transfers versus $20 billion on Ethereum. TRON’s USDT supply exceeds $80 billion, and Binance controls $44 billion in stablecoins, two-thirds of its reserves. Still, competition is intensifying. MetaMask is preparing to launch mUSD, Paxos has proposed USDH, and newer stablecoins like EURC and PYUSD are gaining traction. Regulatory clarity is also emerging—EU’s MiCA, the US GENIUS Act, and Asian frameworks in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan are paving the way for institutional adoption.
USDD Price Outlook: Can It Compete With USDT and USDC?
With a market cap around $450–$460 million, USDD represents only 0.3% of Tether’s scale. Liquidity has improved through the PSM, but still lags behind USDT and USDC, and collateral remains heavily exposed to TRX volatility. While its incentives may draw in early adopters, USDD’s long-term survival depends on deeper liquidity, diversified reserves, and wider integration into real-world economic use cases.