Falcon Finance, the universal collateralization layer that underpins on-chain liquidity and yield generation, has publicly rolled out a sweeping transparency, security and risk-management framework for its overcollateralized synthetic dollar, USDf. The move comes after a turbulent market spell on October 10, when the protocol says it saw more than $700 million in new deposits and fresh USDf minting, a development Falcon characterizes as a signal of growing institutional confidence in its stability and asset-management practices.
USDf has also recently crossed the $2 billion mark in circulation across digital-asset markets, showing the protocol’s rapid growth and its stated commitment to long-term, sustainable DeFi infrastructure. Falcon’s approach is pitched as a corrective to years of opacity across parts of the crypto industry, where complex products and hidden reserve practices have too often left users exposed to unexpected losses.
“Users should never have to guess what is backing their assets or how risk is being managed,” Andrei Garchev, Founding Partner at Falcon Finance, said. “If USDf is to serve as collateral and a yield instrument for serious builders and institutions, its reserves, custody, and controls must be transparent by default and validated by independent experts.” That philosophy is now reflected in a multi-layered framework that combines live public reporting, third-party attestations, institutional custody, and regular smart-contract reviews.
New Transparency Playbook
At the center of the new program is Falcon’s public Transparency Dashboard, a live interface that gives users a near-real-time window into the protocol’s financial position and risk profile. The dashboard displays USDf’s overcollateralization ratio and a daily breakdown of reserve composition, including holdings in Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, stablecoins and tokenized U.S. Treasury bills, and shows how those assets are apportioned between regulated custodians and on-chain multisignature wallets.
Falcon also exposes how reserves are deployed into yield strategies such as arbitrage, options and staking, enabling users to see not just what backs USDf but how the protocol generates returns and manages exposure. Transparency on the dashboard is reinforced by independent attestations. Falcon has partnered with HT.Digital to provide regular proof-of-reserves attestations; the firm will perform weekly reserve checks to confirm that circulating USDf tokens are fully backed, while broader assurance reports will examine reserve management and internal controls on a quarterly cadence.
Those public attestations are intended to give counterparties and institutional allocators confidence that on-chain figures match off-chain holdings. Security audits form a second pillar of oversight. Falcon’s smart contracts have been subjected to third-party reviews by firms including Zellic and Pashov, whose reports examine the integrity of the protocol’s on-chain architecture and surface potential issues for remediation.
The audits, Falcon says, are one layer in a defense-in-depth program designed to reduce the class of risks that have historically led to failures across the sector. Custody and settlement practices complete the triangle. Falcon holds collateral with regulated custodians and uses multi-party computation (MPC) wallet infrastructure, so no single entity holds unilateral control over private keys.
The protocol also favors off-exchange settlement and position mirroring rather than moving underlying assets onto centralized venues, a design intended to limit exposure to exchange hacks, withdrawal freezes and insolvency events. Falcon’s public materials name partnerships with regulated custody providers and highlight a mix of on-chain multisig arrangements alongside institutional custody as part of the strategy to harden user funds.
Taken together, the dashboard, attestations, audits and custody model are positioned as a single program to make USDf one of the most accountable synthetic assets in digital finance. Falcon has signaled a particular focus on serving both institutional and retail clients who want sustainable yields that sit above short-term Treasury returns but avoid leverage and liquidation risk, emphasizing high-liquidity trading strategies and real-world-asset adoption that can be unwound quickly if needed.
Falcon Finance describes itself as building a universal collateral infrastructure that can turn any liquid asset, from crypto to tokenized real-world securities, into USD-pegged on-chain liquidity, allowing institutions, protocols and capital allocators to unlock stable, yield-generating liquidity from assets they already hold. With the new transparency and security framework, Falcon aims to translate that technical promise into operational trust, making it easier for cautious, regulated actors to engage with on-chain dollars without surrendering traditional checks and controls.
As DeFi continues to seek institutional adoption, Falcon’s experiment in default-on transparency will be watched closely: if daily attestations, public dashboards and institutional custody can truly align incentives and cut opacity, USDf could become a template for how synthetic dollars scale beyond niche trader pockets into mainstream financial plumbing.