Lido DAO’s proposed one-time buyback is large enough to matter for market structure, but not large enough to settle the core question around LDO. Using 10,000 stETH, or about $20 million, to repurchase roughly 70 million tokens may tighten supply and address a sharp valuation gap, yet it does not by itself reverse the revenue decline, staking outflows, and market-share losses that created that gap.
A treasury move aimed at a specific dislocation
The proposal would use 10,000 stETH to buy back around 8.5% of LDO’s circulating supply, with execution planned in 1,000 stETH batches across Cow Swap, 1inch, and Uniswap. Structuring the purchases this way matters because it signals a tactical intervention rather than a headline-only announcement: Lido is trying to add demand while limiting unnecessary slippage in relatively thin token liquidity.
The DAO is framing the move around undervaluation, with LDO trading near historic lows around $0.27 and at roughly a 70% discount relative to ETH. That framing is understandable, but it can be misread: a token can be cheap against past ratios and still remain under pressure if the protocol’s earnings power and staking position are deteriorating at the same time.
Why the market stopped paying up for LDO
Lido’s 2025 numbers explain why a buyback is being discussed now instead of earlier. Total revenue fell 23% year over year to $40.5 million, and staking fee income dropped to $37.4 million as lower APR and net staking outflows weighed on the protocol.
The competitive problem is also visible in share data. Lido’s portion of staked ETH slipped from above 28% to just over 24%, while TVL declined from 9.63 million ETH to 8.81 million ETH, an 8.5% drop in ETH terms rather than a dollar-denominated distortion caused only by market prices.
That distinction matters for crypto investors trying to separate signal from narrative. If a protocol is losing share in its core market while exchange staking and liquid restaking platforms keep pulling users with easier distribution or subsidized yields, then a token buyback is mostly a capital allocation response to a weakened setup, not proof that the setup has already improved.
One-off support versus the automated plan
This buyback is separate from Lido’s previously discussed automated program of up to $10 million annually. The automated version would depend on thresholds including ETH above $3,000 and protocol revenue above $40 million, which makes it a rule-based mechanism tied to operating conditions rather than a discretionary treasury action.
The one-time proposal serves a different purpose. It tries to absorb near-term selling pressure now, while the automated plan, if launched later, would function more like a recurring capital return framework that only activates when protocol economics are healthy enough to support it.
| Program | Size | Funding asset | Trigger | What it signals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proposed one-time buyback | 10,000 stETH, about $20M | stETH | Q2 governance approval | Immediate support for a depressed token |
| Planned automated buyback | Up to $10M annually | Treasury program | Revenue and ETH-price thresholds, including ETH above $3,000 and revenue above $40M | Ongoing capital return only if fundamentals justify it |
Large sellers have not given Lido the benefit of the doubt
Whale behavior is one reason the proposal should be read carefully. Since the October 2025 crash, large wallets have offloaded nearly 80 million LDO tokens, a sign that some sophisticated holders are treating treasury support as insufficient unless the operating trend changes.
Lido is not relying only on the token market. The DAO has also approved a $5 million first-loss protection buffer for its Earn product suite, split between wstETH and USDC, in an attempt to make curated DeFi strategies easier to trust. That may help product retention at the margin, but it also shows the protocol is spending treasury resources across several fronts while its treasury, reported around $157 million, is no longer expansive enough to make repeated interventions painless.
The checkpoints that would turn this into more than a price prop
The next immediate event is the Q2 governance vote on the one-time buyback. After that, the more important checkpoints are whether the automated mechanism actually launches and whether staking revenue and ETH-denominated TVL stop declining.
Institutional use of stETH, including products such as WisdomTree’s stETH-based ETP in Europe, shows that Lido still has distribution advantages and relevance beyond DeFi-native users. But for LDO holders, the cleaner decision lens is not institutional adoption in isolation; it is whether that adoption starts translating into stabilizing market share, stronger fee generation, and less reliance on discretionary treasury action to support the token.
If those metrics do not improve, the buyback can still create a temporary supply shock without establishing a durable floor. If they do improve, the buyback starts to look less like a defensive maneuver and more like early balance-sheet positioning ahead of a genuine recovery.
Short Q&A
Does buying back 8.5% of circulating supply guarantee a rebound?
No. It can reduce float and add demand, but sustained repricing usually needs improving revenue, TVL, or market share.
Why does the distinction between the one-time and automated buyback matter?
The one-time plan is discretionary and reactive. The automated plan is meant to operate only when Lido’s economics and ETH market conditions meet preset thresholds.
What is the clearest warning sign after the vote?
Continued declines in staking fee income or ETH-denominated TVL after the buyback would suggest the token support did not solve the underlying business pressure.

