$FF #FalconFinance @Falcon Finance
With Bitcoin holding above $88,000, the market mood has shifted. Instead of chasing fast pumps, attention is moving toward protocols that can perform even when prices aren’t flying. Falcon Finance fits that lane perfectly.
The $FF token has spent most of December trading between $0.11 and $0.12, giving it a market cap around $260–280 million and daily volume near $20–25 million. That’s far below September’s highs, but what stands out is stability. Usage hasn’t dropped, and the system keeps doing its job.
USDf supply has now crossed $2 billion, backed by over $2.25 billion in reserves. Even better, that backing is diversified. Alongside BTC, ETH, and stablecoins, Falcon now holds Mexican CETES bonds, tokenized corporate credit through Centrifuge’s JAAA vaults, and gold exposure. The protocol no longer depends on just one type of asset.
Mid-December also brought an important governance step. FIP-1 passed smoothly, upgrading Prime Staking to reward users who commit for the long term with better yields and stronger voting power. It wasn’t flashy—but calm governance is usually a good sign.
A Synthetic Dollar Built for Stability
Falcon’s main idea is simple: let users create a dollar-like asset without selling what they already own.
USDf is minted using an overcollateralized mix of crypto assets and real-world assets. Once minted, users can stake it into sUSDf to earn yield. That yield comes from low-risk strategies like funding-rate arbitrage, market-neutral positions, and selective DEX liquidity.



