The post Sonic Introduces USSD Stablecoin to Power Liquidity Across Its DeFi Ecosystem appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Sonic’s long-anticipated native dollarThe post Sonic Introduces USSD Stablecoin to Power Liquidity Across Its DeFi Ecosystem appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Sonic’s long-anticipated native dollar

Sonic Introduces USSD Stablecoin to Power Liquidity Across Its DeFi Ecosystem

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

Sonic’s long-anticipated native dollar has arrived. USSD, short for US Sonic Dollar, is launching as a network-integrated, permissionless USD stablecoin built on top of Frax’s sfrxUSD infrastructure, and Sonic is positioning it as the plumbing that will steady dollar liquidity across the entire ecosystem. The announcement frames USSD not as a flashy new product for its own sake, but as a foundational money-layer designed to make trading, lending, settlements, and treasury operations on Sonic more predictable and composable.

Under the hood, USSD relies on the Frax stack: it is a GENIUS-compatible frxUSD deployment, meaning the token inherits Frax’s model of fully backed, redeemable dollar exposure and the cross-chain plumbing Frax has been building. That connection is significant. Frax has been actively rolling out frxUSD and FraxNet as a routable, institution-friendly stablecoin layer, and Sonic’s team is leveraging that groundwork so USSD can be minted, moved, and redeemed across multiple chains without introducing bespoke new custody arrangements.

One of the louder headlines is institutional backing: the reserves that underpin USSD will include tokenized short-duration USD assets from established names, including BlackRock, Superstate, and WisdomTree, part of the same reserve framework Frax has used to give frxUSD deep, conservative backing. That mix is meant to square two priorities that often fight in DeFi: the permissionless, composable on-chain behaviour developers want, and the conservative reserve quality institutional actors demand.

Anchoring DeFi Liquidity Across the Network

Operationally, USSD is built to be simple and open. Anyone can mint USSD 1:1 by depositing supported USD assets through non-custodial smart contracts on Sonic, and the project emphasizes zero minting fees at launch. Supported on-chain collateral includes popular dollar tokens like USDC and USDT as well as tokenized treasury representations such as BlackRock’s BUIDL and Superstate’s USTB, and minting is designed to work across more than ten chains via Frax’s cross-chain rails. Holders can redeem USSD 1:1 into supported assets on the chain of their choice; the system also plans to support common rails like CCTP where applicable.

Why does Sonic care so much about a native dollar? The team argues that where dollar liquidity concentrates on-chain, so does activity: trading volumes build, lending markets deepen, margin and settlement rails become reliable, and protocol treasuries can plan. A network-native stablecoin reduces fragmentation, instead of liquidity leaking out to external USD primitives. USSD is meant to keep that liquidity near the base layer, so Sonic applications can interoperate without awkward accounting or settlement friction. As usage grows, the yield from the assets that back USSD is designed to flow back into the Sonic ecosystem in the form of buybacks and incentives, not disappear entirely to outside custodians.

USSD is already listed on market trackers and visible within Sonic’s token lists; market pages show USSD trading at its peg and available across Sonic, Ethereum, Base, Arbitrum and several other chains. For builders and users, the token contract is published (0x000000000eccff26b795f73fb0a70d48da657fef), and Sonic points to Frax infrastructure for minting and redemption routes. Coin pages and auditors are available for anyone who wants to dig into supply or proof-of-reserves.

At launch, USSD reads like a pragmatic compromise. The on-chain freedom DeFi needs, married to the predictable reserve narrative institutions want. Whether that recipe draws the liquidity Sonic hopes for will depend on adoption by market makers, integrations with DEXs and lending venues, and the day-to-day performance of cross-chain routing. For now, Sonic has given builders a native dollar to rally around and a concrete path to make the network’s financial stack feel a little more whole. For full details, Sonic’s USSD page and Frax’s frxUSD documentation provide the technical and reserve details that developers and treasurers will want to study.

Source: https://blockchainreporter.net/sonic-introduces-ussd-stablecoin-to-power-liquidity-across-its-defi-ecosystem/

Market Opportunity
Sonic SVM Logo
Sonic SVM Price(SONIC)
$0.04295
$0.04295$0.04295
-2.40%
USD
Sonic SVM (SONIC) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Two Tokens Control 86% of the Stablecoin Market and the Gap Is Not Closing

Two Tokens Control 86% of the Stablecoin Market and the Gap Is Not Closing

The global stablecoin market has crossed $333 billion in total supply, and the distribution of that capital is more concentrated than at any point in the asset
Share
Ethnews2026/03/14 08:13
Foreigner’s Lou Gramm Revisits The Band’s Classic ‘4’ Album, Now Reissued

Foreigner’s Lou Gramm Revisits The Band’s Classic ‘4’ Album, Now Reissued

The post Foreigner’s Lou Gramm Revisits The Band’s Classic ‘4’ Album, Now Reissued appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. American-based rock band Foreigner performs onstage at the Rosemont Horizon, Rosemont, Illinois, November 8, 1981. Pictured are, from left, Mick Jones, on guitar, and vocalist Lou Gramm. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images) Getty Images Singer Lou Gramm has a vivid memory of recording the ballad “Waiting for a Girl Like You” at New York City’s Electric Lady Studio for his band Foreigner more than 40 years ago. Gramm was adding his vocals for the track in the control room on the other side of the glass when he noticed a beautiful woman walking through the door. “She sits on the sofa in front of the board,” he says. “She looked at me while I was singing. And every now and then, she had a little smile on her face. I’m not sure what that was, but it was driving me crazy. “And at the end of the song, when I’m singing the ad-libs and stuff like that, she gets up,” he continues. “She gives me a little smile and walks out of the room. And when the song ended, I would look up every now and then to see where Mick [Jones] and Mutt [Lange] were, and they were pushing buttons and turning knobs. They were not aware that she was even in the room. So when the song ended, I said, ‘Guys, who was that woman who walked in? She was beautiful.’ And they looked at each other, and they went, ‘What are you talking about? We didn’t see anything.’ But you know what? I think they put her up to it. Doesn’t that sound more like them?” “Waiting for a Girl Like You” became a massive hit in 1981 for Foreigner off their album 4, which peaked at number one on the Billboard chart for 10 weeks and…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:26
FCA, crackdown on crypto: Consumer Duty and custody rules

FCA, crackdown on crypto: Consumer Duty and custody rules

Crypto regulation in the United Kingdom enters a decisive phase. The FCA has initiated a consultation to set minimum standards.
Share
The Cryptonomist2025/09/17 22:50