Sparka DeFi lending platform and on-chain asset allocator, reportedly allocated $100 million of its stablecoin reserves to Superstate USCC Funda crypto-regulated trading product that generates a return from price differentials between the spot and futures markets. The update would mark one of the large-scale moves by a DeFi protocol aimed at diversifying away from government securities as Treasury yields hit a 6-month low.
Robert LeshnerSuperstate CEO, said the investment allows Spark to maintain exposure to yield opportunities that would be uncorrelated with Federal Reserve rate policy while operating within “a compliant institutional framework.” Leshner added that the protocols adapt to the new pricing environment and help them “do it within a regulated institutional framework.”
Sam MacPhersonCEO and co-founder of Phoenix Laboratoriesthe lead developer behind Spark, added that Superstate’s USCC fund allows Spark to diversify its reserves while maintaining “the same level of security and compliance that Spark always prioritizes.” They added that as on-chain ecosystems continue to evolve, combining regulated yield with “verifiable infrastructure is essential to providing long-term stability and value to Spark users.”
With the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield now falling below 4% to 3.976% last week, the Fed’s rate-cutting cycle would put pressure on stablecoin issuers and DeFi protocols that rely on “short-duration” Treasuries to fund their operations and incentives – “forcing them to reduce incentives or find other sources of return.”
Superstate’s USCC fund uses basic trading strategies that aim to exploit the gap between spot and futures prices on digital assets.
The fund would maintain a market-neutral exposure, “covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana and XRP (including staked assets), alongside US Treasury holdings, currently yielding a 30-day yield of 8.35%.”
The allocation allows Spark to maintain exposure to yield opportunities that would be “uncorrelated to the Federal Reserve’s interest rate policies while operating within a compliant institutional framework.”
These treasury headwinds come as crypto derivatives reach new milestones: CME recorded “$900+ billion in futures and options trading in Q3, led by ETH.”
Active derivatives markets tend to “support the small price differentials harvested by the USCC carry strategy.”
The Superstate fund would be held by Digital Anchorageaudited by Ernst & Youngand calculates its net asset value via NAV Fund Services.
The holdings would be disclosed and would include Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana and XRP in “custody and collateral positions, alongside CME futures and futures contracts with institutional counterparties like FalconX.”


