
Elixir has decided to shut down its synthetic dollar stablecoin, deUSD, after a $93 million loss at Stream Finance, its largest borrower.
Author: Sahil Thakur
Published On: Fri, 07 Nov 2025 04:56:07 GMT
7th November 2025 â Elixir has decided to shut down its synthetic dollar stablecoin, deUSD, after a $93 million loss at Stream Finance, its largest borrower. The protocol said it has already processed redemptions for 80% of holders and has snapshotted the remaining balances.
These users will be able to redeem 1:1 for USDC when a claims portal goes live.
On November 4, Stream Finance halted withdrawals. The move followed a disclosure from an external fund manager about a $93 million loss. Stream now owes at least $285 million to various lenders , including over $68 million to Elixir.
Elixir had loaned deUSD to Stream to support xUSD, Streamâs own stablecoin. That token has now collapsed below $0.20, triggering ripple effects across the DeFi ecosystem. One notable victim: Stable Labsâ USDX, which has also sharply depegged.
In response, Elixir disabled deUSDâs mint and redeem functions. The goal was to stop further liquidations and avoid Stream dumping deUSD before repaying its debt.
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Elixir maintains that deUSD remains fully backed. The team said itâs working with Morpho, Euler, Compound, and vault curators to unwind its loan positions and recover funds.
Even though withdrawals have been halted, Elixir has promised that all users will be made whole. According to the team, the entire remaining supply has been snapshotted. A claims portal is under development.
The team added that âaffected LPs in AMMs and lending marketsâ will also be able to claim the full value of their position.
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Launched in mid-2024, it pitched itself as a âtruly decentralizedâ synthetic stablecoin, rivaling Ethenaâs USDe. It quickly gained traction. It was even used as collateral by Hamilton Laneâs tokenized HLSCOPE fund.
But the collapse of Stream Finance â which held about 90% of the deUSD supply, has effectively ended deUSDâs growth story.
Stream, meanwhile, has refused to repay or close positions, according to Elixir. The protocol described itself as the only lender with âfull $1 redemption rights.â Still, it now faces the challenge of recovering loans from a counterparty unwilling to pay.
So far, the damage appears limited to synthetic stablecoin and credit circles. But some liquidity pools have already seen outflows. And market watchers are pointing to growing distrust in synthetic dollars backed by cross-protocol leverage.
This event has sparked comparisons to previous failures like Terraâs UST and Iron Finance, though the scale remains more contained, for now.
Real voices. Real reactions.
Gauntlet has paused withdrawals on Compound, and the deUSD depeg now means users canât withdraw their capital in case of bad debt exposure. This is what they call "locked in". https://t.co/PdEjovoulD https://t.co/QzimIC1HxQ

$deUSD collapsed to $0.10 last night (-90% in minutes) now back at $0.998 like nothing happened what went down: Elixir HALTED redemptions and announced they're sunsetting deUSD, killed the arb mechanism that keeps it pegged to $1 Stream Finance holds 90% of all deUSD (~$75M) https://t.co/SOhgxTqW79


đ§ľ What actually broke deUSDâs peg 1ď¸âŁ @elixir had $68M USDC (â65% of $deUSD reserves) lent out to Stream Finance. 2ď¸âŁ Stream announced a massive loss + freeze; its $xUSD stablecoin depegged. 3ď¸âŁ That puts a big chunk of deUSDâs backing at risk/illiquid. 4ď¸âŁ Market repriced that https://t.co/NoLmoJt8UP

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