Methodology Note · SLS

Stablecoin Liquidity Score: Methodology Refresh

Published 2026-05-05 · By TokenIntel · Companion note to the Tether macro-infrastructure report

Context

TokenIntel computes a Stablecoin Liquidity Score (SLS) every 30 minutes via the sync-stablecoin-liquidity cron. The current composite has three sub-scores: stablecoin (aggregate stablecoin market-cap dynamics), etf (BTC/ETH ETF flow context), and chain (Ethereum-side stablecoin distribution). The composite feeds TI's regime classifier as a macro-liquidity input. Today's reading is SLS 50 (neutral), with $321B total stablecoin market cap and Ethereum holding 51% of supply.

Recent third-party data on Tether (BDO Q4 2025 attestation, S&P stability score downgrade, Brookings analysis on Treasury demand) surfaces three factors the current methodology does not weight explicitly. This note proposes adding them. The companion Tether macro-infrastructure report walks through the underlying data; this note focuses on how to wire it into the SLS computation.

Three proposed factor additions

1. Chain concentration risk

The dominant single-chain hosting USDT (currently TRON, ~44% of USDT supply, ~$82B) is a counterparty-style risk for any asset that routes liquidity through USDT pairs. A sustained operational, governance, or regulatory issue at TRON would propagate directly into 44% of the USDT distribution rail.

Proposed sub-score: chain_concentration_sub_score. Compute the Herfindahl-Hirschman concentration index across the top 6 chains hosting USDT and USDC supply (Ethereum, TRON, Solana, BSC, Arbitrum, Base). Score penalty applies when any single chain exceeds 40% of stablecoin supply for a sustained 7-day window.

2. Reserve composition risk

The S&P stability score downgrade of USDT to 5 (lowest) in late 2025 cited rising exposure to higher-risk assets (Bitcoin, gold, corporate bonds, secured loans) at 24% of reserves, up from 17% a year earlier. This is a structural quality dimension TI's current SLS does not capture.

Proposed sub-score: reserve_quality_sub_score. Compute as a weighted average of (1 − non-cash-equivalent share) across the top 5 stablecoin issuers, with attestation freshness as a secondary input. Sources: BDO attestations for USDT, Circle's monthly attestations for USDC, comparable for issuers in the top 5. Score penalty rises when aggregate non-cash-equivalent share crosses 20% across the issuer pool.

3. External rating drift

S&P Global, Moody's, and Fitch publish stability and credit ratings on major stablecoin issuers. Drift in these ratings is an early-warning signal independent of TI's own onchain measurements. The S&P stability score was the cleanest external read on USDT's risk drift in 2025.

Proposed sub-score: rating_drift_sub_score. Track quarterly changes in published stability and credit ratings on USDT, USDC, USDP, USDe, and FRAX. Score penalty rises on any downgrade across the issuer pool, with magnitude weighted by the issuer's share of stablecoin market cap.

What this changes about live readings

Today's SLS reads 50 (neutral). With the three proposed additions wired in, the same date would read materially lower:

Composite SLS with these three factors integrated would likely read in the 35 to 42 range rather than 50, reflecting structural risks the current methodology blurs into a single neutral score. The point is not that today's reading is wrong; the point is that a "neutral" composite obscures three distinct concerns the regime classifier should respond to differently.

Open questions

  1. Weighting. The three new sub-scores need calibration against historical regime transitions. Backtest candidates: 2022 USDT redemption stress event, 2023 USDC depeg during the SVB collapse, 2024 PYUSD launch and growth.
  2. Issuer pool scope. Top 5 stablecoin issuers covers ~95% of stablecoin market cap. Adding the long tail (USDD, FDUSD, EURS, stablecoin-as-protocol assets) adds noise. Recommend cap at top 5 with quarterly review.
  3. Rating data sourcing. S&P, Moody's, and Fitch publish stability and credit ratings selectively. Building an automated data pipe requires either a paid feed or a quarterly manual update via the existing refresh-stablecoin-ratings cron pattern.
  4. USA₮ classification. Tether's onshore USA₮ (launched January 27, 2026 under the GENIUS Act framework) is a separate issuer from USDT. Methodology should track it as a distinct entity once supply crosses a $1B threshold.

Next steps

This note is calibration material. Concrete actions for the next two weeks:

  1. Add chain-concentration computation to sync-stablecoin-liquidity using DefiLlama's per-chain stablecoin breakdown. Wire as chain_sub_score v2.
  2. Build a one-shot reserve-quality data pull from BDO's quarterly Tether attestation and Circle's monthly attestation; cache in Supabase as stablecoin_reserve_quality. Wire as a new sub-score.
  3. Defer the rating-drift sub-score until quarterly manual data sourcing is set up. The signal is real but the data acquisition cost is non-trivial.
  4. Backtest the proposed composite against the 2022 USDT and 2023 USDC stress events before promoting to the live regime classifier.
Signals not noise. Fundamentals not narrative.
Methodology note for internal calibration. Public version posted as a transparency artifact. Reserve data sourced from issuer attestations as cited above. S&P stability scores are public ratings from S&P Global. This document does not constitute investment advice. The proposed methodology changes have not yet been wired into the live regime classifier; backtest validation is a precondition for promotion.