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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.monolith.market/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Holder & Staker FAQ

Two paths: redemptions (Coin → collateral from free‑debt pool) and the PSM (Coin → reference asset, if enabled). Redemptions always depend on free debt and redeemable collateral; PSM sells depend on on‑hand asset liquidity.
Paid borrowers’ interest (after protocol/local fees) is minted as Coin to the Vault.
No. The Vault simply holds Coin and reflects interest minted to it.
No. Monolith is intentionally partially redeemable: only free‑debt collateral is used for redemptions. If free‑debt capacity or redeemable collateral is scarce, redemptions may be limited until borrowers migrate to free debt or the controller nudges the system back into balance. The PSM (if enabled) offers an additional convertibility path.
First, unsafe loans are liquidated in bounded chunks with an incentive, restoring solvency. If a position becomes irrecoverable, a write‑off socializes the loss across all borrowers.
Three layers: (1) Redemptions convert Coin → collateral from free‑debt borrowers at the oracle price minus a small fee (2) the interest controller adjusts borrow rates using the free‑debt ratio as an indirect price oracle (thin buffer → higher rates; ample buffer → lower rates) (3) the PSM (if enabled) adds direct Coin ↔ reference‑asset convertibility. Arbitrage across these keeps price near $1.
No. Coin is a minimal ERC‑20 minted/burned by the Lender. There is no pause, blacklist, or upgrade hook in any Monolith contracts.
Each instance issues its own Coin backed by its chosen collateral, oracle, parameters (collateral factor, minDebt, fees, target band), and optional PSM setup. Risk/behavior can differ; always review the instance’s parameters before holding or staking.