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Utilisation Analytics

DAI on Aave V3 (Optimism)
Liquidity Crunch Risk [Exponential Phase (High Rates)]
97.48% Utilisation Rate

Interest Rate Model

KINK (80%)

The chart visualises the algorithmic relationship between supply and demand. The sharp rise (kink) typically occurs at 80-90% utilisation to protect liquidity.

Liquidity Composition

Borrowed (97.48%) Free (2.5%)
Available Capital $33,010
Active Loans $1,276,901
Crunch Warning: Low liquidity buffer. Withdrawals may fail.

Deep Dive Analytics

Think of Utilisation as the 'Occupancy Rate' of a hotel. A 100% rate makes the most money, but leaves no room for error. A 0% rate is safe but unprofitable.

DAI is currently sitting at 97.48%. This is a 'Liquidity Squeeze' scenario. Utilisation is pushing against the ceiling. While short-term APY is high, the risk of a temporary 'bank run' (inability to withdraw) is elevated.

Forecast: Cost of capital is rising. The protocol is algorithmically increasing rates to discourage new loans and protect the remaining liquidity buffer. Traders should monitor this metric daily, as it precedes APY changes.

Liquidity Stress Test

Projecting pool stability under hypothetical high-demand scenarios.

Scenario Remaining Liquidity Risk Level
Current State $33,010 Overheated
At 90% Utilisation $130,991 Critical
At 95% Utilisation $65,496 Insolvent Risk

Key Metrics Explained

Utilisation Rate: The percentage of the pool's total capital currently lent out to borrowers. It is the primary driver of interest rates in DeFi.

The Kink: A specific point in the interest rate curve (usually 80-90%) where borrowing costs jump exponentially to discourage depleting the pool entirely.

Safety Buffer: The remaining 2.5% of liquidity ensures lenders can withdraw their assets without waiting for borrowers to repay loans.

Utilisation Guide

Why is Utilisation Important?

The Utilisation Rate is the single most important metric in DeFi lending. It balances the ecosystem. If utilisation is too low (e.g., 10%), there is too much idle capital earning no interest, leading to low APY for lenders. If utilisation is too high (e.g., 99%), there is a "liquidity crunch," meaning lenders cannot withdraw their funds until borrowers repay loans.

The Interest Rate Mechanism

Protocols use an algorithmic "Interest Rate Model" to manage this. As utilisation rises, the borrowing interest rate rises to encourage repayments. Most protocols aim for an "Optimal Utilisation" rate (usually around 80%), where capital efficiency is maximised without risking a liquidity crisis.

Data Analysis by MooniTooki
Chief Data Architect @DeFiStar.io Follow on X for real-time alpha and risk updates.

Data Sources: Metrics derived from hourly snapshots via the DeFiStar Indexer. Active Tracking: 04 Dec 2025, 11:04 UTC.
Disclaimer: Data is for informational purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Terms of Service apply.

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