
Market Cap
$200.58M
24h Volume
$20.73M
Circulating
2.34B FF
All-Time High
$0.770814
Market Cap
$200.58M
Volume (24h)
$20.73M
Circulating Supply
2.34B FF
Max Supply
10B FF
1 FF = $0.09
| All-Time High | $0.770814 (September 29, 2025) |
| All-Time Low | $0.061338 (May 4, 2026) |
Falcon Finance is a synthetic dollar protocol built around USDf, a multi-collateral stablecoin, and sUSDf, its yield-bearing wrapper. The project launched in 2024 with the goal of turning a wider basket of crypto assets into productive on-chain dollars. Instead of accepting only USDC or ETH like classic CDP stablecoins, Falcon takes BTC, ETH, major altcoins, and tokenized real-world assets as collateral and mints USDf against them.
FF is the governance and utility token of the protocol. Holders steer collateral whitelisting, risk parameters, fee splits, and the share of yield routed back to sUSDf stakers. The system targets the same product surface as other synthetic-dollar issuers, with a deliberately broader collateral mix and a delta-neutral hedging engine that captures funding-rate yield. For the chain Falcon runs on, see our Ethereum page.
FF trades on a growing list of centralized and decentralized venues, with the deepest liquidity in FF/USDT and FF/USDC pairs. The price card above pulls a multi-venue feed and refreshes every 60 seconds, so the quote tracks the volume-weighted reference across the most active books. Because FF is a relatively young governance token, intraday volatility is higher than on majors, and spreads can widen during low-volume sessions.
What actually moves FF on any given week:
For multi-year scenarios and on-chain valuation models, see our Falcon Finance price forecast.
▼ +88.89% from ATH
| Trade → |
| PancakeSwap V3 (BSC) | 0XAC23B90A79504865D52B49B327328411A23D4DB2/0X55D398326F99059FF775485246999027B3197955 | $0.085835 | Trade → |
| Bybit | FF/USDT | $0.08582 | Trade → |
Falcon Finance is built around two tokens. USDf is the synthetic dollar; sUSDf is the staked, yield-bearing version of it. The mechanics matter because the entire investment case for FF rests on whether this dual-token design holds together under stress.
The model is closer to a delta-neutral stablecoin than a classic CDP. The collateral itself is hedged in size on perpetual venues, which is what allows Falcon to accept volatile assets at a 1:1 mint ratio for parts of the basket without blowing up during a drawdown. The trade-off is that the system inherits exchange counterparty risk and funding-rate risk.
FF has a fixed maximum supply with allocations split across the team, investors, ecosystem incentives, and a community treasury controlled by governance. Vesting cliffs and linear unlocks stretch over multiple years, which means circulating supply rises gradually rather than in a single dump.
The practical question for FF holders is whether USDf supply and sUSDf yield grow fast enough to make fee accrual material before scheduled unlocks weigh on price. The protocol publishes reserves and emissions data on its dashboard, which is the cleanest place to track the ratio.
Falcon Finance and Ethena both issue a synthetic dollar backed by hedged crypto collateral, but the design choices diverge in ways that matter for risk and yield.
If you want to compare the original delta-neutral synthetic dollar head-to-head, see our Ethena page. Both protocols sit in the same category and tend to move together on macro funding-rate news.
Synthetic-dollar protocols live and die on transparency. Falcon Finance publishes a public reserves dashboard, lists its custodians, and discloses which exchanges hold the hedge legs of the portfolio. Independent audits by recognized firms cover the core contracts, and the protocol has run a public bug bounty since launch.
None of these controls remove tail risk. A simultaneous exchange failure, a deep funding-rate inversion, or a smart-contract exploit could still impair USDf and, by extension, FF. The controls are there to make those scenarios survivable rather than terminal.
FF is listed on a growing set of centralized exchanges and on the main DEXs where USDf liquidity lives. The flow looks like this:
If you plan to vote in Falcon governance, hold FF in a wallet that supports delegation. FF sitting on a centralized exchange does not vote on your behalf.
Holding FF is a leveraged bet on a young synthetic-dollar protocol. Price volatility is the obvious risk. Several protocol-specific risks matter just as much.
This page is information, not financial advice. Talk to a licensed advisor before allocating real capital.
At the time of writing, Falcon Finance (FF) trades at $0.085714, with a 24-hour trading volume of $20.73M and a total market capitalization of $200.58M. The asset is currently ranked #192 among all tracked cryptocurrencies by market cap.
Over the last 24 hours, the FF price has dropped +1.94%. On the seven-day chart, Falcon Finance has retraced +4.08%, under sustained selling pressure in both timeframes. Short-term price swings are often amplified by liquidity conditions, news flow, and derivatives positioning, so traders should confirm signals across multiple indicators before acting.
Falcon Finance's all-time high of $0.770814 was set on September 29, 2025. The current market price is +88.89% below that historical peak. Distance from the all-time high is a common reference point when evaluating long-term recoveries and identifying macro support or resistance levels.
Buying Falcon Finance (FF) is straightforward once you know which exchange to use and which trading pair offers the best liquidity. The steps below describe the typical flow used by most investors today.
You can also use the built-in Falcon Finance converter above to estimate exactly how much FF you would receive for a given amount in USD before placing an order.
Whether Falcon Finance is a good investment depends on your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for volatility. Like all cryptocurrencies, FF carries significant market risk — prices can rise or fall sharply in a single day, and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.
This page provides data and analysis for educational purposes only. It is not financial advice. Always do your own research, diversify, and never invest more than you can afford to lose.