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[ARFC] Umbrella Parameter Update: Target Liquidity and Emission Optimization

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title: [ARFC] Umbrella Parameter Update: Target Liquidity and Emission Optimization author: @TokenLogic created: 2026-06-16


Overview

Umbrella was introduced to provide protocol level protection against insolvency events by maintaining dedicated liquidity reserves across key markets. The initial configuration of Target Liquidity and emission levels (maxEmissionPerSecond) was set based on the risk profile, market conditions, and borrowing activity observed at launch.

Since then, several aspects of the protocol and broader market environment have evolved. Active loan volumes across Umbrella covered markets have declined materially; the composition of collateral backing these loans has shifted toward higher quality assets, protocol protections have strengthened, and yield conditions across DeFi have changed significantly. These developments may impact both the amount of liquidity required for Umbrella and the level of incentives necessary to attract and retain coverage providers.

This publication reviews the current configuration of the USDC, USDT, GHO, and ETH Umbrella markets to determine whether existing Target Liquidity levels, emission budgets, and associated APY ranges remain aligned with current protocol risks and market conditions.

Upon evaluating changes in borrowing activity, collateral composition, coverage capacity, and competitive yield opportunities, this publication presents clear recommendations for each Umbrella market that balance the need to maintain effective protection with improvements in capital efficiency and incentive utilisation.

Framework for Umbrella Liquidity Requirements

The primary objective of Umbrella is to maintain sufficient liquidity to absorb protocol deficits while minimizing the cost of providing that protection. As a result, both Target Liquidity and emission levels should reflect the protocol's underlying risk exposure and evolve with changing market conditions.

At a high level, protocol deficits arise when collateral securing outstanding debt cannot be liquidated for sufficient value to fully repay the borrower's obligations. The likelihood and severity of such losses depend on a combination of factors, including the size of the active loan book, the quality and composition of collateral backing those loans, the leverage employed by borrowers, and the market's ability to absorb liquidation activity during periods of stress.

The size of the active loan book serves as the starting point for evaluating coverage requirements. Declining loan balances reduce the amount of debt that can ultimately contribute to deficit creation.

However, the amount of outstanding debt alone does not determine risk. The characteristics of the collateral securing that debt are equally important. Assets with deeper liquidity, lower volatility, and stronger market adoption generally exhibit greater resilience during periods of market stress than more volatile or less liquid assets. In addition, collateral risk is influenced by how assets are configured within the lending market, including parameters such as LT, LB and other controls that determine borrower leverage and liquidation behaviour.

Borrower equity provides an additional layer of protection by representing the excess value of collateral relative to outstanding debt. This equity acts as a loss absorbing buffer that must be exhausted before protocol deficits can occur. As a result, larger equity buffers increase the magnitude of adverse market movements required to impair borrower positions and reduce the protocol's exposure to insolvency events.

Potential liquidation demand during adverse market conditions is another key consideration. The protocol's exposure is influenced by the market's capacity to absorb liquidation volume without a significant price impact. Markets supported by deep on-chain and off-chain liquidity are better equipped to process liquidations efficiently and reduce the likelihood of losses being realised.

In addition to market driven factors, protocol level protections influence the amount of liquidity that must ultimately be maintained within Umbrella. Mechanisms such as reserve specific Deficit Offsets provide a first layer of protection against losses and reduce the amount of exposure that must be covered by Umbrella liquidity providers.

Together, these factors determine the amount of liquidity required to support a given market. While risk conditions influence the quantity of coverage needed, the incentives paid to attract that coverage are largely determined by the opportunity cost faced by underwriters. As yield opportunities across DeFi and broader markets change, the compensation required to attract and retain Umbrella stakers may also change. Consequently, the assessment of Target Liquidity and emissions should consider both the evolution of protocol risk and changes in the opportunity cost of providing coverage.

The following sections evaluate how these drivers have evolved since Umbrella's launch and assess whether the current Target Liquidity, emission budgets, and APY configurations remain aligned with prevailing protocol risks and market conditions.

Recommendation

Based on the analysis presented above, we recommend updating Umbrella Target Liquidity and emission configurations for the USDC, USDT, and WETH markets, while sunsetting the GHO Umbrella market and transitioning responsibility for any future deficits to the DAO Treasury.

The primary drivers behind these recommendations are the material reduction in active borrowing activity, improvements in collateral quality across the stablecoin markets, and the substantial increase in reserve specific Deficit Offsets since Umbrella's launch. Aggregate active loans across covered markets declined by approximately 43%, reducing the amount of debt that ultimately requires protection. At the same time, collateral quality improved across the stablecoin markets, with a larger share of borrowing now backed by highly liquid ETH, BTC, and stablecoin collateral. In addition, Deficit Offsets increased substantially, particularly for the USDC and USDT markets, providing a significantly larger DAO funded first loss buffer before Umbrella liquidity is exposed to realized losses. Taken together, these developments support lower Target Liquidity requirements across the Umbrella ecosystem. The magnitude of the proposed adjustments varies by market. Larger reductions are proposed for the USDC and USDT markets, where collateral quality improved materially, and Deficit Offsets increased significantly since launch. A more conservative adjustment is proposed for the WETH market. Although active borrowing declined materially, the composition of collateral backing WETH borrowing shifted toward liquid restaking assets.

The recommended emission updates are designed to align with the revised Target Liquidity levels while maintaining competitive yields for Umbrella participants. For the USDC and USDT markets, only modest reductions to the target Umbrella APY are proposed. The recommended yields remain competitive relative to alternative stablecoin lending and yield generating opportunities while reflecting the improved risk profile of these markets.

For WETH, the target Umbrella APY is increased despite the reduction in Target Liquidity. This adjustment is intended to attract additional coverage to a market that has historically been underserved.

For GHO, borrowing has declined to $100 million. Given the relatively small size of the market, maintaining a dedicated Umbrella reserve and ongoing emissions is no longer the most efficient mechanism for providing protection. As a result, we recommend sunsetting GHO within Umbrella by reducing Target Liquidity and emissions to zero.

To facilitate an orderly wind down of the market, we also recommend increasing the GHO Deficit Offset to 3 million GHO. The purpose of this increase is to protect existing stakers during the transition period. Since GHO stakers will no longer receive emissions after the proposed changes are implemented, the higher Deficit Offset ensures that deficits are absorbed by the DAO before any slashing can occur while stakers unwind their positions and withdraw from the market.

Once emissions and Target Liquidity for the GHO Umbrella market are reduced to zero, any future deficits generated by the GHO reserve would be covered by the Treasury.

From an emissions perspective, the proposed configuration reduces annual incentive expenditure from $8.19 million to $3.35 million, representing annual savings of $4.84 million, or approximately 59%. The largest reductions are achieved within the USDT, GHO, and USDC markets, which together account for more than 97% of the total savings.

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Overall, the proposed configuration reduces annual emission expenditure while preserving meaningful coverage, maintaining competitive yields for underwriters, and aligning Umbrella parameters more closely with current protocol risk and market conditions.

Specification

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Disclaimer

TokenLogic is an active service provider to the Aave DAO, the beneficiary of stream 100072 and the KPI as outlined in this publication. The scope of this engagement is available via this forum proposal.

TokenLogic supports and maintains an independent delegate voting platform within the Aave community.

TokenLogic and associated entities have no undisclosed material conflicts of interest at the time of submission.

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Discussion

Aave DAO[ARFC] Umbrella Parameter Update: Target Liquidity and Emission Optimization

Timeline

Jun 22, 2026Proposal created
Jun 23, 2026Proposal vote started
Jun 24, 2026Proposal updated