Ethena Labs is taking a hard look at one of traditional finance’s most boring, most reliable instruments to back its synthetic dollar. The protocol is evaluating tokenized AAA-rated Collateralized Loan Obligations, or CLOs, as a new reserve asset for USDe, with allocations capped at roughly $310 million per position.
What’s actually happening
Ethena is specifically targeting the Janus Henderson Anemoy AAA CLO Fund, known by the ticker JAAA, which is issued through the Centrifuge platform. LlamaRisk, a participant in Ethena’s Risk Committee, conducted due diligence on the fund and gave it the green light. Each position would be limited to approximately $310 million, a cap designed to maintain liquidity and manage concentration risk.
AAA CLOs were chosen for a specific reason. At the top tranche, these instruments have historically carried a zero default rate. They also offer strong liquidity profiles and yield spreads that sit modestly above Treasury bills.
This isn’t Ethena’s first venture outside the crypto sandbox. The protocol already holds positions in BlackRock’s BUIDL tokenized Treasury fund. But the CLO evaluation represents a meaningfully different asset class, one that introduces corporate credit exposure rather than government debt.
The bigger picture: a four-part strategy
The CLO evaluation fits into a broader diversification framework that Ethena outlined in a blog post on April 6, 2026. That four-part strategy targets institutional lending, a wider range of real-world assets, and expanded trading strategies including perpetual futures on equities and commodities.
USDe was originally built on a delta-neutral strategy: hold long spot crypto positions and hedge them with short perpetual futures contracts. When funding rates are positive, this generates yield. By layering in AAA CLOs and other real-world assets, Ethena is building a yield floor that doesn’t depend on crypto market conditions.
What this means for investors
Incorporating AAA CLOs into reserve backing is a positioning play aimed at institutional capital. Conservative investors and fund managers who might dismiss a stablecoin backed purely by crypto derivatives could find a product backed by investment-grade corporate credit and Treasuries considerably more palatable.
The $310 million cap per position suggests Ethena is thinking carefully about liquidity risk, not just credit risk. Even highly rated instruments can become problematic if you hold too large a position relative to daily trading volume.
There are risks to watch. CLOs, even at the AAA tranche, are more complex than Treasuries. They carry exposure to corporate credit cycles, and while the historical default rate at the senior tranche has been zero, this is not a guarantee of future performance.
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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