Liquidations

What is liquidation?

Liquidation is the process of terminating a borrower's account when their Health factor goes below 100%, and their collateral value does not fully cover their loan value. This might occur when the collateral decreases in value or the loan debt increases in value against each other.

Helth Factor

The health factor is a critical metric within the lendOS that measures the safety of a borrow position. It is calculated as:

Health Factor = (Total Collateral Value * Weighted Average Liquidation Threshold) / Total Borrow Value

The health factor measures a borrow position’s stability. The liquidation threshold, set by lendOS Governance for each asset, determines the maximum percentage of value that can be borrowed against the asset. For example, if a user supplies $1,000 in ETH with an 80% liquidation threshold and borrows $600 in USDT, the health factor would be 1.333.

A health factor above 1 represents a position that is above the liquidation threshold. Regular monitoring is essential, as the health factor fluctuates based on both the value of collateral and borrowed assets. To improve the health factor, users can either supply more collateral or repay part of the borrow position. The health factor is directly tied to collateral value. If the value rises, the health factor improves; if it falls, the health factor declines, increasing the risk of liquidation.

However, there is no universally "safe" health factor. The health factor depends on the volatility and correlation of the assets. Lower health factors may be acceptable, for example, with correlated assets, such as stablecoins or assets closely tied to ETH.

Liquidation happens when a borrower's health factor drops below 1, meaning their collateral is insufficient to cover the borrowed amount. This can occur when the value of collateral decreases or the borrowing amount is increased. When a liquidation occurs, up to 50% of the borrower's debt is repaid by a liquidator. A liquidation fee is also levied against the borrower's collateral. Liquidations are permissionless, meaning any participant within the network can initiate the liquidation of an eligible borrow position.

Liquidations are highly competitive, requiring a deep understanding of the protocol and technical proficiency. Liquidators closely monitor borrow positions, react swiftly to market changes, and prioritise liquidation transactions to be the first to execute the liquidation.

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