S&P Global is shaking up the digital asset world by launching stablecoin ratings directly onchain through Chainlink on Base. This development marks the first time traditional financial ratings are being integrated natively into decentralized finance. It represents a merging of Wall Street credibility with blockchain transparency. For protocols across DeFi, this is not just a symbolic step toward regulation, it fundamentally changes the risk models that power lending pools, collateral mechanisms, and automated market operations. Protocols can now programmatically adjust collateral ratios based on these live credit ratings, allowing smart contracts to manage risk dynamically in real time. This integration gives new meaning to creditworthiness in DeFi. Smart contracts that once relied solely on oracle-fed price feeds can now respond to changes in perceived asset quality. If a stablecoin’s rating falls below investment-grade level, lending protocols can reduce leverage, increase collateral demands, or automatically freeze liquidity pools, all without human intervention. However, this innovation has created a looming existential threat for several major stablecoins. Tokens like DAI, FRAX, and LUSD have no current path to S&P approval, meaning they will exist outside the new ratings network. That could instantly label them as “unrated,” a word that carries toxic implications in both traditional and digital markets. The numbers tell the story. The global stablecoin supply sits around $180B, but analysts estimate as much as 70% of that capital could consolidate into rated assets such as USDC, USDT, and PYUSD. The compression effect will hit smaller, algorithmic stablecoins hardest. Liquidity is the lifeblood of stability, and once large DeFi lenders start limiting exposure to unrated stables, market depth will dry up fast. Many predict that within 6 months, most unrated stablecoins could effectively disappear. This is not just a market clean-up, it is a reorganization of digital finance power. S&P’s onchain ratings via Chainlink could act as the new gatekeeper for capital flow in Web3. While this may bring a layer of safety and transparency, it also shifts leverage toward centralized providers and institutions that can meet regulatory compliance standards. The age of wild-west stablecoins is ending, and with it, a core piece of DeFi’s decentralized identity. The Stablecoin Purge: S&P Global’s Onchain Ratings Could Wipe Out Half the Market was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this storyS&P Global is shaking up the digital asset world by launching stablecoin ratings directly onchain through Chainlink on Base. This development marks the first time traditional financial ratings are being integrated natively into decentralized finance. It represents a merging of Wall Street credibility with blockchain transparency. For protocols across DeFi, this is not just a symbolic step toward regulation, it fundamentally changes the risk models that power lending pools, collateral mechanisms, and automated market operations. Protocols can now programmatically adjust collateral ratios based on these live credit ratings, allowing smart contracts to manage risk dynamically in real time. This integration gives new meaning to creditworthiness in DeFi. Smart contracts that once relied solely on oracle-fed price feeds can now respond to changes in perceived asset quality. If a stablecoin’s rating falls below investment-grade level, lending protocols can reduce leverage, increase collateral demands, or automatically freeze liquidity pools, all without human intervention. However, this innovation has created a looming existential threat for several major stablecoins. Tokens like DAI, FRAX, and LUSD have no current path to S&P approval, meaning they will exist outside the new ratings network. That could instantly label them as “unrated,” a word that carries toxic implications in both traditional and digital markets. The numbers tell the story. The global stablecoin supply sits around $180B, but analysts estimate as much as 70% of that capital could consolidate into rated assets such as USDC, USDT, and PYUSD. The compression effect will hit smaller, algorithmic stablecoins hardest. Liquidity is the lifeblood of stability, and once large DeFi lenders start limiting exposure to unrated stables, market depth will dry up fast. Many predict that within 6 months, most unrated stablecoins could effectively disappear. This is not just a market clean-up, it is a reorganization of digital finance power. S&P’s onchain ratings via Chainlink could act as the new gatekeeper for capital flow in Web3. While this may bring a layer of safety and transparency, it also shifts leverage toward centralized providers and institutions that can meet regulatory compliance standards. The age of wild-west stablecoins is ending, and with it, a core piece of DeFi’s decentralized identity. The Stablecoin Purge: S&P Global’s Onchain Ratings Could Wipe Out Half the Market was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story

The Stablecoin Purge: S&P Global’s Onchain Ratings Could Wipe Out Half the Market

2025/10/23 22:35
2 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

S&P Global is shaking up the digital asset world by launching stablecoin ratings directly onchain through Chainlink on Base. This development marks the first time traditional financial ratings are being integrated natively into decentralized finance. It represents a merging of Wall Street credibility with blockchain transparency. For protocols across DeFi, this is not just a symbolic step toward regulation, it fundamentally changes the risk models that power lending pools, collateral mechanisms, and automated market operations. Protocols can now programmatically adjust collateral ratios based on these live credit ratings, allowing smart contracts to manage risk dynamically in real time.

This integration gives new meaning to creditworthiness in DeFi. Smart contracts that once relied solely on oracle-fed price feeds can now respond to changes in perceived asset quality. If a stablecoin’s rating falls below investment-grade level, lending protocols can reduce leverage, increase collateral demands, or automatically freeze liquidity pools, all without human intervention. However, this innovation has created a looming existential threat for several major stablecoins. Tokens like DAI, FRAX, and LUSD have no current path to S&P approval, meaning they will exist outside the new ratings network. That could instantly label them as “unrated,” a word that carries toxic implications in both traditional and digital markets.

The numbers tell the story. The global stablecoin supply sits around $180B, but analysts estimate as much as 70% of that capital could consolidate into rated assets such as USDC, USDT, and PYUSD. The compression effect will hit smaller, algorithmic stablecoins hardest. Liquidity is the lifeblood of stability, and once large DeFi lenders start limiting exposure to unrated stables, market depth will dry up fast. Many predict that within 6 months, most unrated stablecoins could effectively disappear.

This is not just a market clean-up, it is a reorganization of digital finance power. S&P’s onchain ratings via Chainlink could act as the new gatekeeper for capital flow in Web3. While this may bring a layer of safety and transparency, it also shifts leverage toward centralized providers and institutions that can meet regulatory compliance standards. The age of wild-west stablecoins is ending, and with it, a core piece of DeFi’s decentralized identity.


The Stablecoin Purge: S&P Global’s Onchain Ratings Could Wipe Out Half the Market was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

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