With over 1.7 million daily active users, Sui is growing faster than Ethereum and competing with Aptos, thanks to its high-speed DeFi, institutional adoption, and aggressive liquidity incentives.
Since its founding in 2022 by former Meta engineers, @SuiNetwork has been developed into a high-throughput, low-latency Layer 1 blockchain that prioritises scalability, low fees, and user-centric design.
Its core technology - the next-generation Mysticeti consensus protocol, derived from Narwhal (mempool Tusk (consensus)) - enables efficient transaction sequencing and strong data availability. Sui has attracted widespread attention from institutional investors and the DeFi community.
With new protocols launched monthly and a user base that continues to expand through DeFi, gaming, and digital payments, stablecoins are the bread and butter of SUI’s ecosystem.
Let’s take a deeper look at the SUI ecosystem and its development.
2.1 Conceptual differences from account-based systems
In a typical blockchain like Ethereum or BNB Chain, each account holds a static balance that is updated via a credit/debit system recorded in the ledger. In contrast, Sui uses an object-based model, where each item—user wallet, token, NFT—exists as an object with unique properties and ownership. Key impacts on stablecoins include:
These principles underpin Sui’s reputation for flexibility and scalability, but they also require advanced indexing technology to accurately track stablecoin supply, distribution and historical balances.
How object versioning and partial transfer work in Sui
Below is a conceptual diagram showing how partial transfers of a stablecoin (or any Sui-based token) create new object versions and ownership changes.
Original object (Object0):
Partial transfer of 30 tokens:
Version management:
SZNS is a data solutions provider that specializes in the Sui blockchain’s unique object-based structure. Unlike traditional account-based blockchains, where balances are stored in a single ledger entry, Sui represents assets as objects, which means each transaction updates and creates a new version of the object rather than just changing the wallet’s balance.
This object-centric model creates fundamental challenges for tracking and aggregating stablecoin balances, as stablecoin supply and liquidity are not neatly stored in a single contract but are distributed across multiple object states. SZNS solves these challenges by dynamically rebuilding token balances and indexing liquidity across multiple DeFi protocols on Sui.
From a high-level overview, SZNS addresses these challenges through a multi-layered approach:
Object level balance reconstruction
Unified DeFi Liquidity Mapping
Exception handling
By aggregating data from these indexing pipelines, SZNS can reliably present the latest stablecoin metrics – key to understanding ecosystem liquidity flows and user behavior.
A step-by-step guide
data ingestion
SZNS continuously monitors new transactions, block data and status changes on the Sui blockchain.
Relevant information (e.g., object creation, ownership changes, balance updates) is extracted into the indexer.
Object level scanner (balance reconstruction)
The indexer queries all objects owned by each wallet.
Keep only the latest version of each object ID in the “live” index.
Older versions of each object are archived for historical lookup or forensic analysis (e.g., viewing a wallet’s balance at a specific block number or date).
DeFi Liquidity Mapper
Identify protocol-specific object types relevant to DeFi:
Custodial contracts for dedicated yield farms or IDO platforms.
Normalize data into a standard internal model for comparison across DeFi protocols.
Exception handler
Any protocol-specific special circumstances (e.g., “heavy-benchmarked” stablecoins, partially collateralized structures).
Final aggregation and API
Data from the previous steps are aggregated into a single warehouse.
End users (wallet browsers, analysis dashboards, DeFi applications) can query the API of SZNS to obtain:
Market trends
From $5.42 million to $555.15 million, the total market capitalization of stablecoins on Sui in just over a year highlights the strong growth of the ecosystem.
This growth is a reflection of Sui’s technical strengths and user-friendly design:
Sui ranks seventh in 24-hour trading volume, surpassing Hyperliquid and Avalanche.
From $5.4 million to $490 million, the total market capitalization of stablecoins on Sui in just over a year highlights the strong growth of the ecosystem.
Sui’s ecosystem is experiencing rapid growth, driven primarily by a surge in new accounts, strong adoption of DeFi, and increased trading activity. I once communicated with the ecological leader of SUI. He said that SUI is vigorously stimulating the development of the Defi ecosystem.
While DeFi is booming on the back of rising TVL, there has been a temporary slowdown in the creation of NFTs and tokens, but this is the reason for the market trend.
In addition, Sui has surpassed Ethereum in terms of daily active addresses and is gradually approaching Aptos. Its steady growth highlights continued adoption in the DeFi, gaming, and stablecoin sectors, which makes it a strong L1 contender.
Sui Stablecoin Supply Overview
The total market capitalization of the Sui stablecoin is $495.1 million, an increase of $15.82 million (+3.30%) in 7 days, which reflects strong growth and continued demand.
Starting from 2025, the steady increase in the total market value of stablecoins indicates that the market has increased confidence in the Sui stablecoin ecosystem. In addition to USDC, the diversification of stablecoins such as FDUSD and AUSD is also gradually gaining attention.
USDC Dominance: USDC remains the most dominant stablecoin on Sui, accounting for 47.47% of the market share. It highlights its role as the preferred source of liquidity.
Significant growth performer:
Underperforming Stablecoins:
Below is a detailed analysis of the three largest local stablecoins – AUSD, USDC (native to Sui) and USDY – as well as FDUSD and BUCK.
4.1 Supply growth
Stablecoin supply on Sui is surging, driven primarily by DeFi protocol demand, institutional trust, and ecosystem incentives. Lending marketplaces like Suilend and yield farms on Cetus are driving adoption, while Circle’s USDC issuance adds credibility. AUSD and USDY thrive with strong DeFi incentives and attract liquidity and capital inflows.
FDUSD (market cap over $120 million) and BUCK (market cap over $39 million) are also noteworthy stablecoins, but are less covered in the current analysis.
Strong supply growth is primarily driven by protocols:
AUSD
Anchoring mechanism: Algorithm + Mortgage
Mortgage model:
Vaults may accept mainstream assets bridged on Sui (e.g., BTC, ETH) or native SUI.
Main use cases:
USDC (Sui)
Anchoring mechanism: Fiat currency support (Circle)
Regulatory compliance:
Main use cases:
Bridging: Since Circle issues USDC on multiple chains (Ethereum, Solana, Sui), large amounts of capital can flow seamlessly through official bridging solutions. This further increases liquidity.
USDY
Anchoring mechanism: Crypto Mortgage
Smart contracts automatically liquidate positions to help maintain the peg if the collateralization ratio falls below a safe threshold.
Strong APR:
Some yield farming strategies allow for dual rewards (USDY + the protocol’s native governance token).
Main use cases:
Trader Leverage: Traders can deposit crypto assets, mint USDY, and use the minted stablecoins to enter other positions, thus effectively leveraging their portfolios.
FDUSD
Although not widely tracked in analysis, FDUSD is a fast-rising stablecoin with a market cap of over $120 million:
Anchoring mechanism and mortgage:
May be fiat-backed or fiat-like reserves, but specific details vary based on disclosure by the issuing entity.
Adoption factors:
BUCK
Hybrid mortgage:
Main use cases:
Growth potential:
7.1 Total Value Locked (TVL) Distribution
Here is the TVL distribution of the three major stablecoins in Sui’s leading DeFi protocol – AUSD, USDC and USDY:
7.1.1 Observation
7.1.2 Protocol Overview
7.2 Liquidity fragmentation and emerging solutions
EOA (Externally Owned Address)
Despite growth in total supply, stablecoin ownership remains highly concentrated among a handful of addresses:
AUSD: Largest holder (Wallet A): 47.4% of the EOA holding supply.
Behavior: Mainly deploy funds in Suilend and take advantage of the high annualized rate of return.
USDC (Sui): Largest holder (Wallet D): 16.6%。
The next five largest holders: Approximately 25% of the total.
Behavior: Actively provide liquidity on multiple DEXs (such as Cetus, Navi, etc.).
USDY: Two wallets (Wallet B, Wallet C): Accounted for 94%.
Behavior: Perform yield farming operations on CETUS and take advantage of the protocol’s 46.92% annualized rate of return.
While DeFi remains a core driver of stablecoin adoption, Sui is actively expanding into gaming and payment solutions – both of which are major areas of stablecoin usage.
9.1 Game: Case of SuiPlay0x1
@SuiPlay aims to integrate Sui’s blockchain technology into mainstream PC and console games.
Key elements:
9.2 Payments and financial inclusion
Suis’ co-founder Kostas Krypto demonstrates an SMS-based trading mechanism for the unbanked:
SMS transaction mechanism:
Users with basic mobile phones can send/receive stablecoins by sending specific commands or codes.
Underbanked areas:
Sub-Saharan Africa or Southeast Asia may see increased adoption of stablecoins as remittance and peer-to-peer payment options.
Issuer Opportunities:
Local stablecoin issuers (e.g. AUSD, USDC on Sui) can integrate with local telecommunications companies or non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to provide a stable medium of exchange for daily transactions.
While this report focuses on Sui, a brief comparison table helps compare Sui’s stablecoin growth to other major L1s like Ethereum, Solana, and Avalanche:
Key takeaways:
Sui has grown from a preliminary L1 blockchain to a rapidly growing ecosystem in which stablecoins play a vital role.
As Sui continues to expand and explore new territories, stablecoins will continue to play a central role in enabling liquid, stable on-chain commerce.
The next phase of Sui’s development could make it the blockchain of choice for global payments, gaming economies, and innovative DeFi products – all powered by stablecoins that provide trust and liquidity.
This article is reproduced from [Water Ni|Asian bridge]. The copyright belongs to the original author [@arndxt_xo @nihaovand]. If you have any objections to the reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and the team will handle it as soon as possible according to relevant procedures.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article represent only the author’s personal views and do not constitute any investment advice.
Other language versions of the article are translated by the Gate Learn team and are not mentioned in Gate.io, the translated article may not be reproduced, distributed or plagiarized.
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With over 1.7 million daily active users, Sui is growing faster than Ethereum and competing with Aptos, thanks to its high-speed DeFi, institutional adoption, and aggressive liquidity incentives.
Since its founding in 2022 by former Meta engineers, @SuiNetwork has been developed into a high-throughput, low-latency Layer 1 blockchain that prioritises scalability, low fees, and user-centric design.
Its core technology - the next-generation Mysticeti consensus protocol, derived from Narwhal (mempool Tusk (consensus)) - enables efficient transaction sequencing and strong data availability. Sui has attracted widespread attention from institutional investors and the DeFi community.
With new protocols launched monthly and a user base that continues to expand through DeFi, gaming, and digital payments, stablecoins are the bread and butter of SUI’s ecosystem.
Let’s take a deeper look at the SUI ecosystem and its development.
2.1 Conceptual differences from account-based systems
In a typical blockchain like Ethereum or BNB Chain, each account holds a static balance that is updated via a credit/debit system recorded in the ledger. In contrast, Sui uses an object-based model, where each item—user wallet, token, NFT—exists as an object with unique properties and ownership. Key impacts on stablecoins include:
These principles underpin Sui’s reputation for flexibility and scalability, but they also require advanced indexing technology to accurately track stablecoin supply, distribution and historical balances.
How object versioning and partial transfer work in Sui
Below is a conceptual diagram showing how partial transfers of a stablecoin (or any Sui-based token) create new object versions and ownership changes.
Original object (Object0):
Partial transfer of 30 tokens:
Version management:
SZNS is a data solutions provider that specializes in the Sui blockchain’s unique object-based structure. Unlike traditional account-based blockchains, where balances are stored in a single ledger entry, Sui represents assets as objects, which means each transaction updates and creates a new version of the object rather than just changing the wallet’s balance.
This object-centric model creates fundamental challenges for tracking and aggregating stablecoin balances, as stablecoin supply and liquidity are not neatly stored in a single contract but are distributed across multiple object states. SZNS solves these challenges by dynamically rebuilding token balances and indexing liquidity across multiple DeFi protocols on Sui.
From a high-level overview, SZNS addresses these challenges through a multi-layered approach:
Object level balance reconstruction
Unified DeFi Liquidity Mapping
Exception handling
By aggregating data from these indexing pipelines, SZNS can reliably present the latest stablecoin metrics – key to understanding ecosystem liquidity flows and user behavior.
A step-by-step guide
data ingestion
SZNS continuously monitors new transactions, block data and status changes on the Sui blockchain.
Relevant information (e.g., object creation, ownership changes, balance updates) is extracted into the indexer.
Object level scanner (balance reconstruction)
The indexer queries all objects owned by each wallet.
Keep only the latest version of each object ID in the “live” index.
Older versions of each object are archived for historical lookup or forensic analysis (e.g., viewing a wallet’s balance at a specific block number or date).
DeFi Liquidity Mapper
Identify protocol-specific object types relevant to DeFi:
Custodial contracts for dedicated yield farms or IDO platforms.
Normalize data into a standard internal model for comparison across DeFi protocols.
Exception handler
Any protocol-specific special circumstances (e.g., “heavy-benchmarked” stablecoins, partially collateralized structures).
Final aggregation and API
Data from the previous steps are aggregated into a single warehouse.
End users (wallet browsers, analysis dashboards, DeFi applications) can query the API of SZNS to obtain:
Market trends
From $5.42 million to $555.15 million, the total market capitalization of stablecoins on Sui in just over a year highlights the strong growth of the ecosystem.
This growth is a reflection of Sui’s technical strengths and user-friendly design:
Sui ranks seventh in 24-hour trading volume, surpassing Hyperliquid and Avalanche.
From $5.4 million to $490 million, the total market capitalization of stablecoins on Sui in just over a year highlights the strong growth of the ecosystem.
Sui’s ecosystem is experiencing rapid growth, driven primarily by a surge in new accounts, strong adoption of DeFi, and increased trading activity. I once communicated with the ecological leader of SUI. He said that SUI is vigorously stimulating the development of the Defi ecosystem.
While DeFi is booming on the back of rising TVL, there has been a temporary slowdown in the creation of NFTs and tokens, but this is the reason for the market trend.
In addition, Sui has surpassed Ethereum in terms of daily active addresses and is gradually approaching Aptos. Its steady growth highlights continued adoption in the DeFi, gaming, and stablecoin sectors, which makes it a strong L1 contender.
Sui Stablecoin Supply Overview
The total market capitalization of the Sui stablecoin is $495.1 million, an increase of $15.82 million (+3.30%) in 7 days, which reflects strong growth and continued demand.
Starting from 2025, the steady increase in the total market value of stablecoins indicates that the market has increased confidence in the Sui stablecoin ecosystem. In addition to USDC, the diversification of stablecoins such as FDUSD and AUSD is also gradually gaining attention.
USDC Dominance: USDC remains the most dominant stablecoin on Sui, accounting for 47.47% of the market share. It highlights its role as the preferred source of liquidity.
Significant growth performer:
Underperforming Stablecoins:
Below is a detailed analysis of the three largest local stablecoins – AUSD, USDC (native to Sui) and USDY – as well as FDUSD and BUCK.
4.1 Supply growth
Stablecoin supply on Sui is surging, driven primarily by DeFi protocol demand, institutional trust, and ecosystem incentives. Lending marketplaces like Suilend and yield farms on Cetus are driving adoption, while Circle’s USDC issuance adds credibility. AUSD and USDY thrive with strong DeFi incentives and attract liquidity and capital inflows.
FDUSD (market cap over $120 million) and BUCK (market cap over $39 million) are also noteworthy stablecoins, but are less covered in the current analysis.
Strong supply growth is primarily driven by protocols:
AUSD
Anchoring mechanism: Algorithm + Mortgage
Mortgage model:
Vaults may accept mainstream assets bridged on Sui (e.g., BTC, ETH) or native SUI.
Main use cases:
USDC (Sui)
Anchoring mechanism: Fiat currency support (Circle)
Regulatory compliance:
Main use cases:
Bridging: Since Circle issues USDC on multiple chains (Ethereum, Solana, Sui), large amounts of capital can flow seamlessly through official bridging solutions. This further increases liquidity.
USDY
Anchoring mechanism: Crypto Mortgage
Smart contracts automatically liquidate positions to help maintain the peg if the collateralization ratio falls below a safe threshold.
Strong APR:
Some yield farming strategies allow for dual rewards (USDY + the protocol’s native governance token).
Main use cases:
Trader Leverage: Traders can deposit crypto assets, mint USDY, and use the minted stablecoins to enter other positions, thus effectively leveraging their portfolios.
FDUSD
Although not widely tracked in analysis, FDUSD is a fast-rising stablecoin with a market cap of over $120 million:
Anchoring mechanism and mortgage:
May be fiat-backed or fiat-like reserves, but specific details vary based on disclosure by the issuing entity.
Adoption factors:
BUCK
Hybrid mortgage:
Main use cases:
Growth potential:
7.1 Total Value Locked (TVL) Distribution
Here is the TVL distribution of the three major stablecoins in Sui’s leading DeFi protocol – AUSD, USDC and USDY:
7.1.1 Observation
7.1.2 Protocol Overview
7.2 Liquidity fragmentation and emerging solutions
EOA (Externally Owned Address)
Despite growth in total supply, stablecoin ownership remains highly concentrated among a handful of addresses:
AUSD: Largest holder (Wallet A): 47.4% of the EOA holding supply.
Behavior: Mainly deploy funds in Suilend and take advantage of the high annualized rate of return.
USDC (Sui): Largest holder (Wallet D): 16.6%。
The next five largest holders: Approximately 25% of the total.
Behavior: Actively provide liquidity on multiple DEXs (such as Cetus, Navi, etc.).
USDY: Two wallets (Wallet B, Wallet C): Accounted for 94%.
Behavior: Perform yield farming operations on CETUS and take advantage of the protocol’s 46.92% annualized rate of return.
While DeFi remains a core driver of stablecoin adoption, Sui is actively expanding into gaming and payment solutions – both of which are major areas of stablecoin usage.
9.1 Game: Case of SuiPlay0x1
@SuiPlay aims to integrate Sui’s blockchain technology into mainstream PC and console games.
Key elements:
9.2 Payments and financial inclusion
Suis’ co-founder Kostas Krypto demonstrates an SMS-based trading mechanism for the unbanked:
SMS transaction mechanism:
Users with basic mobile phones can send/receive stablecoins by sending specific commands or codes.
Underbanked areas:
Sub-Saharan Africa or Southeast Asia may see increased adoption of stablecoins as remittance and peer-to-peer payment options.
Issuer Opportunities:
Local stablecoin issuers (e.g. AUSD, USDC on Sui) can integrate with local telecommunications companies or non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to provide a stable medium of exchange for daily transactions.
While this report focuses on Sui, a brief comparison table helps compare Sui’s stablecoin growth to other major L1s like Ethereum, Solana, and Avalanche:
Key takeaways:
Sui has grown from a preliminary L1 blockchain to a rapidly growing ecosystem in which stablecoins play a vital role.
As Sui continues to expand and explore new territories, stablecoins will continue to play a central role in enabling liquid, stable on-chain commerce.
The next phase of Sui’s development could make it the blockchain of choice for global payments, gaming economies, and innovative DeFi products – all powered by stablecoins that provide trust and liquidity.
This article is reproduced from [Water Ni|Asian bridge]. The copyright belongs to the original author [@arndxt_xo @nihaovand]. If you have any objections to the reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team, and the team will handle it as soon as possible according to relevant procedures.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article represent only the author’s personal views and do not constitute any investment advice.
Other language versions of the article are translated by the Gate Learn team and are not mentioned in Gate.io, the translated article may not be reproduced, distributed or plagiarized.