comment-questionFAQ

Answers to common questions about incentives and staking

FAQ

chevron-rightWhat's staking for?hashtag

Staking is the crypto-native way to align a protocol with its token. It lets protocols both reward aligned behavior and return value to tokenholders.

chevron-rightIs staking live?hashtag

Yes. The native stakingarrow-up-right and LSTarrow-up-right contracts are code-complete, audited and open source. Tally's app includes a frontend for staking.

See OBOL & RARI Staking.

chevron-rightAre the staking contracts audited? hashtag

Yes, they've been audited multiple times.

Auditors from Sherlock and Offbeat Security audited the contracts. Additionally, Sherlock and Cantina ran public audit contests. Learn more about the audits in the Security Sectionarrow-up-right of the technical docs.

chevron-rightWhere do rewards come from?hashtag

Protocols provide staking rewards, either from protocol fees or inflation of the native token.

chevron-rightWhy is 1 staked token not worth 1 underlying token?hashtag

ERC20 tokens generally have a fixed balance. As the LST accrues rewards, a single LST token is worth more underlying tokens.

chevron-rightWhat's the difference between liquid staking and native staking?hashtag
Liquid staking
Native staking

Liquid ERC20 tokens

Non-fungible positions

One staking position

Multiple positions

Rewards claim automatically

Claim rewards manually

Rewards auto-compound

Rewards must be manually staked

Native staking is more configurable. The LST is easier to use. Tally staking supports both at the same time, so users can choose the best option for them.

chevron-rightIs there a fee?hashtag

The native staking system does not have a fee, aside from the gas costs of staking and distributing rewards.

The liquid staking fee switch applies to staking rewards only. The fee is NOT taken from the staked amount.

chevron-rightCan staking be used in restaking and DeFi?hashtag

Yes, that's one of the primary motivations. LST holders can earn rewards and use their position as collateral in DeFi.

chevron-rightHow does unstaking work, and is there a time delay?hashtag

The current version of native staking lets tokenholders withdraw instantly. Withdrawal delays create an incentive for duration-mismatched LSTs, which can blow up.

chevron-rightIs there liquidity risk of LST vs the underlying token?hashtag

Liquidity risk is minimal, because unstaking is instant. If there is a price difference between TOKEN and stTOKEN, arbitrageurs can arbitrage it away.

chevron-rightIs staking compatible with on-chain governance, like ERC20Votes tokens and Governor contracts?hashtag

Yes! Staking is compatible with standard governance tokens and Governor contracts out-of-the-box.

No changes are needed for a standard ERC20 token + Governor contract are needed to support staking.

chevron-rightDoes the system support partial delegation of voting power? hashtag

Yes, stakers can create multiple staking positions. Each staking position can have its own delegate.

chevron-rightCan LST holders participate in governance?hashtag

Yes! The LST can delegate its voting power directly, like a normal governance token. If the holder doesn't delegate the votes, the LST uses the delegation strategy instead. That way, LST voting power is always active in governance.

chevron-rightWho approves the auto delegate?hashtag

The underlying governance does. e.g. Arbitrum governance would pick the auto delegate for `stARB`.

chevron-rightIs there risk of the auto delegate capturing governance?hashtag

The auto delegate has no special powers that might present a danger. Token holders are free to change delegation strategies at any time. Poorly implemented auto delegates do not pose a feedback loop danger, because using the auto-delegate is not better than delegating directly. In the worst case, users withdraw their tokens or delegate them by hand.

Ready to launch incentives and staking? Talk to our team to get startedarrow-up-right.

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