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DeFi’s yield model is broken — Here’s how we fix it

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Opinion by: Marc Boiron, chief executive officer of Polygon Labs

Decentralized finance (DeFi) needs a reality check. Protocols have chased growth through token emissions that promise eye-popping annual percentage yields (APYs) for years, only to watch liquidity evaporate when incentives dry up. The current state of DeFi is too driven by mercenary capital, which is creating artificial ecosystems doomed to collapse.

The industry has been caught in a destructive cycle: Launch a governance token, distribute it generously to liquidity providers to boost total value locked (TVL), celebrate growth metrics, and watch helplessly as yield farmers withdraw their capital and move to the next hot protocol. This model doesn’t build lasting value — it creates temporary illusions of success.

DeFi deserves a better approach to value creation and capital efficiency. The current emission-driven yield model has three fatal flaws that continue to undermine the industry’s potential.

Inflationary emissions

Most yield in DeFi comes from inflationary token emissions rather than sustainable revenue. When protocols distribute native tokens as rewards, they dilute their token value to subsidize short-term growth. This creates an unsustainable dynamic where early participants extract value while later users are stuck holding devalued assets.

Capital flight

Mercenary capital dominates DeFi liquidity. Without structural incentives for long-term commitment, capital moves freely to whatever protocol offers the highest temporary yield. This liquidity isn’t loyal — it follows opportunistic paths rather than fundamental value, leaving protocols vulnerable to sudden capital flight.

Misaligned incentives

Misaligned incentives prevent protocols from building sustainable treasuries. When governance tokens are primarily used to attract liquidity through emissions, protocols fail to capture value for themselves, making investing in long-term development and security impossible.

Recent: SEC plans 4 more crypto roundtables on trading, custody, tokenization, DeFi

These problems have played out repeatedly across multiple DeFi cycles. The “DeFi summer” of 2020, the yield farming boom of 2021 and subsequent crashes all show the same pattern: unsustainable growth followed by devastating contractions.

Protocol-owned liquidity

How can this be fixed? The solution requires shifting from extractive to regenerative economic models, and protocol-owned liquidity represents one of the most promising approaches to solving this problem. Rather than renting liquidity through emissions, protocols can build permanent capital bases that generate sustainable returns.

When protocols own their liquidity, they gain multiple advantages. They become resistant to capital flight during market downturns. They can generate consistent fee revenue that flows back to the protocol rather than temporary liquidity providers. Most importantly, they can create sustainable yield derived from actual economic activity rather than token inflation.

Use bridged assets to generate yield

Staking bridged assets offers another path toward sustainability. Usually, bridged assets just sit there and don’t contribute much toward the liquidity potential of connected blockchains. Through staking the bridge, assets in the bridge are redeployed into low-risk, yield-bearing strategies on Ethereum, which are used to bankroll boosted yields. This allows protocols to align participant incentives with long-term health, and it’s a boost to capital efficiency.

For DeFi to mature, protocols must prioritize real yield — returns generated from actual revenue rather than token emissions. This means developing products and services that create genuine user value and capture a portion of that value for the protocol and its long-term stakeholders.

While sustainable yield models typically produce lower initial returns than emissions-based approaches, these returns are sustainable. Protocols embracing this shift will build resilient foundations rather than chasing vanity metrics.

The alternative is continuing a cycle of boom-and-bust that undermines credibility and prevents mainstream adoption. DeFi cannot fulfill its promise of revolutionizing finance while relying on unsustainable economic models.

The protocols that do this will amass treasuries designed to weather market cycles rather than deplete during downturns. They’ll generate a yield from providing real utility rather than printing tokens.

This evolution requires a collective mindset shift from DeFi participants. Investors need to recognize the difference between sustainable and unsustainable yield. Builders need to design tokenomics that reward long-term alignment rather than short-term speculation. Users need to understand the true source of their returns.

The future of DeFi depends on getting these fundamentals right. It’s time to fix our broken yield model before we repeat the mistakes of the past.

Opinion by: Marc Boiron, chief executive officer of Polygon Labs.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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Coin Market

Pump.fun launches lending platform to finance memecoin buys

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Pump.fun is launching a lending platform to enable users to buy memecoins and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) with borrowed cryptocurrency, the Solana-based memecoin launchpad said. 

Dubbed Pump.Fi, the onchain lending protocol provides “immediate… financing for [any] digital asset,” Pump.fun said in an April 1 X post.

According to Pump.fun, borrowers pay one-third up front and the rest over 60 days. In addition, Pump.Fi will create a marketplace for lenders to buy debt. The protocol did not specify how Pump.Fi — which doesn’t do credit checks — plans to ensure repayment of undercollateralized onchain loans. 

Pump.Fi will let users borrow to buy memecoins. Source: Pump.fun

Related: Pump.fun launches own DEX, drops Raydium

Competitive market

Pump.fun has been grappling with a sharp drawdown in memecoin trading activity on Solana after several high-profile scandals — such as the LIBRA token’s disastrous launch — soured sentiment on memecoins among retail traders. 

Adding onchain lending has the potential to draw more liquidity into the space, which has seen trading volumes stabilize in recent weeks, according to data from Dune Analytics.

Pump.fun has also been expanding its offerings to stay ahead of mounting competition from rival platforms.

Raydium, Solana’s largest decentralized exchange (DEX) by volume, plans to roll out its own memecoin launchpad, LaunchLab. 

Other rival protocols — including Daos.fun, GoFundMeme, and Pumpkin — are also vying for a share of Solana’s memecoin market. 

Number of tokens successfully “bonding” on Pump.fun each day. Source: Dune Analytics

On March 20, Pump.fun launched its own DEX — known as PumpSwap — to replace Raydium as the final home for tokens that successfully bootstrap liquidity on Pump.fun.

Switching to PumpSwap has streamlined PumpFun’s process for listing new tokens and cut costs for users, it said.

PumpSwap also plans to start distributing a portion of trading fees to coin creators, according to Pump.fun co-founder Alon.

The newly launched DEX has already captured a more than 10% share of Solana’s trading volumes and even overtaken Raydium — along with every other Solana app — in 24-hour fees, according to data from Dune Analytics and DefiLlama. On April 1, PumpSwap generated nearly $4 million in fees.

Magazine: Help! My parents are addicted to Pi Network crypto tapper

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Coin Market

Bitcoin miner Bitfarms secures up to $300M loan from Macquarie

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Bitfarms, a global computer infrastructure company known for its Bitcoin mining operations, has entered into a $300 million loan agreement with Macquarie Group to finance the development of its high-performance computing (HPC) data centers.

According to an April 2 announcement, Macquarie’s private debt facility will provide $50 million in initial funding for Bitfarms’ Panther Creek data center project in Pennsylvania. 

The remaining $250 million will be released once Bitfarms achieves “specific development milestones at its Panther Creek location,” the announcement said.

Once developed, Panther Creek will have a nearly 500-megawatt capacity fueled by several power sources. 

Panther Creek “will be sought after by HPC tenants once construction of the project is underway,” said Joshua Stevens, an associate director at Macquarie Group. 

Source: Bitfarms

The project is being delivered at a time when AI applications are fueling growing demand for new sources of computational power and data storage capacity. Bitcoin miners are rushing to fill the void — and to secure reliable revenue streams for themselves in a post-halving environment. 

However, Bitfarms disclosed in its recent quarterly report that it continues to face “regulatory challenges in expanding its energy capacity,” with the approval timeline ranging from 12 to 36 months. 

In the meantime, Bitfarms expects its $125 million acquisition of Stronghold Digital Mining to do much of the heavy lifting in providing additional capacity, CEO Ben Gagnon told investors.

Related: Bitfarms sells Paraguay site to Hive for $85M, refocuses on US

Amid industry pressure, miners are HODLing 

Bitfarms mined 654 Bitcoin (BTC) in the final quarter of 2024 at an average all-in cash cost of $60,800. 

Like other miners, Bitfarms has elected to retain a significant portion of its mined Bitcoin. Industry data shows it currently holds 1,152 BTC on its books, placing it among the top 25 publicly traded Bitcoin investors.

Miners like Hive Digital have doubled down on their long-term Bitcoin “hodl” strategy as a way to bolster their balance sheet. The company’s Bitcoin holdings have swelled to 2,620 BTC. 

Meanwhile, MARA Holdings has accumulated 46,374 BTC and has announced plans for a $2 billion stock offering to acquire more Bitcoin. 

Source: Frank Holmes

Like Bitfarms, Hive Digital, Core Scientific, Hut8 and Bit Digital have also made a strategic pivot toward AI and HPC.

Hive executives told Cointelegraph that the company has repurposed a portion of its Nvidia GPUs for such tasks. They said AI applications can generate more than $2.00 per hour in revenue, compared to just $0.12 per hour for crypto mining activities. 

Related: BTC miners adopted ‘treasury strategy,’ diversified business in 2024: Report

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Coin Market

Most opportune time to buy Bitcoin? Now — Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan explains why

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If you’ve ever wondered when is the right time to invest in Bitcoin (BTC), you won’t want to miss our latest interview with Matt Hougan. As the chief investment officer at Bitwise, Hougan provides an in-depth analysis, explaining why, from a risk-adjusted perspective, there has never been a more opportune time to buy Bitcoin.

In our discussion, Hougan lays out a compelling argument: Bitcoin’s early days were filled with uncertainty — technology risks, regulatory threats, trading inefficiencies, and reputational concerns. Fast forward to today, and those risks have significantly diminished. The launch of Bitcoin ETFs, adoption by major institutional investors, and even the US government’s strategic Bitcoin reserve have all cemented its place in the global financial ecosystem.

“Bitcoin is only 10% of gold. So just to match gold, which I think is just a stopping point on its long-term journey, it has to ten-x from here,” he said.

But that’s just the beginning. Hougan also touches on Bitcoin’s long-term price potential, why institutional adoption is about to accelerate, and how market fundamentals could push Bitcoin to new heights.

“There’s just too much structural long-term demand that has to come into this market against a severely limited new supply, he said.

Watch the full interview now on our YouTube channel, and don’t forget to subscribe!

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