Pendle surpasses 100M staked tokens as emissions slashed by 71%

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Pendle Finance just crossed a milestone that most DeFi protocols only daydream about. More than 100 million PENDLE tokens are now staked, representing roughly 36% of the project’s total supply, and emissions have been cut by 71%.

From vePENDLE to sPENDLE: a strategic overhaul

Back in January 2026, Pendle scrapped its vePENDLE system, the vote-escrowed lockup model that had become standard fare across DeFi. The problem was simple. Only about 20% of the token supply was actively locked under vePENDLE, which meant the model wasn’t doing its job of aligning long-term incentives.

The replacement, sPENDLE, introduced liquid staking with a 14-day withdrawal period. The 36% staking rate against total supply proves the thesis: give users flexibility, and they’ll still commit capital voluntarily.

The protocol also deployed an Algorithmic Incentive Module, or AIM, to dynamically manage token emissions. The original target was a 30% reduction in emissions. AIM overshot that goal by a wide margin, delivering a 71% cut instead.

Buybacks and airdrops sweeten the deal

Since sPENDLE launched, Pendle has executed over 1.96 million PENDLE in open-market buybacks. Every single one of those tokens was distributed directly to stakers. On top of that, approximately $1.5 million in airdrops has been allocated to incentivize participation.

PENDLE’s circulating supply sits around 171 million tokens out of a total supply of approximately 278 million. With 100 million now staked, that leaves a meaningfully smaller float for trading.

Why the old model failed and the new one works

The vePENDLE model suffered from a problem common across DeFi governance tokens. Long lockup periods discourage all but the most committed participants. When only 20% of supply is locked, the governance power concentrates in fewer hands, and the vast majority of holders sit on unlocked tokens with no particular reason not to sell.

sPENDLE’s 14-day withdrawal period threads the needle. It’s long enough to prevent purely speculative hot money from gaming staking rewards. It’s short enough that users don’t feel they’re making a years-long commitment in a market where conditions change weekly. The result is a staking rate that jumped from roughly 20% to 36% of total supply.

What this means for investors

Investors should watch two things closely going forward. First, whether staking participation continues climbing or plateaus around current levels. Second, the sustainability of buybacks matters. Buybacks funded by genuine protocol revenue are bullish. Buybacks funded by treasury drawdowns are a different story entirely, and the distinction is worth monitoring.

One risk that often gets overlooked in staking-heavy models: a 14-day withdrawal period provides some buffer, but during a genuine market crash, that buffer can feel like an eternity. If a significant portion of stakers rush for the exit simultaneously, the withdrawal queue and subsequent sell pressure could create a cascading effect. It’s the tradeoff for all that locked-up liquidity, and it’s one that hasn’t been stress-tested in truly adverse conditions yet.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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