Yesterday, I opened the asset panel and saw that all-too-familiar scene: returns are declining.
It's not a free fall caused by a project explosion, but rather a quite "clean" correction. Funding rates have thinned out, arbitrage opportunities have become less lucrative, and even slight upticks are immediately snatched up.
Honestly, this isn't really an incident. It's the normal state when market competition is at its peak and simple opportunities are gradually disappearing.
The real question worth pondering isn't here—it's not about "how to bring APY back," but rather: **When returns are no longer the main selling point, can this system itself still stand firm?**
To put it more bluntly: if the only reason for a DeFi protocol's existence is "high yields," then once those yields vanish, it should probably fade away too. But looking at the design philosophy, some projects have done their homework in this area.
The binary split of USDf and sUSDf illustrates this well. USDf is never positioned as a "yield machine"; its functions are liquidity, being used, and building ecosystem infrastructure. sUSDf isn't promising eternal returns; it honestly states: sometimes it captures yields, and when it doesn't, it reflects that truth.
This distinction sounds simple, but the real difference lies here.
Many protocols, upon seeing yields decline, react first by mining new yields. Strategies become increasingly complex, risk margins expand outward, gradually drifting away from their original expertise. This approach might sustain for a while on the surface, but in reality, it's a gamble against market cycles—betting that they can always find new opportunities, betting that risks remain within controllable bounds.
But a more prudent approach should be to understand where your true core competitiveness lies, rather than being hostage to the illusion of "must maintain high yields."
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AirdropHarvester
· 9h ago
Basically, it's just self-deception; in the end, it's still a matter of technology and luck.
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ForkInTheRoad
· 16h ago
Basically, it's time for the game of hot potato to end.
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Really, this hits hard. Many projects survive just on that little yield.
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I agree with the USDf logic; honesty is always better than false prosperity.
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Once arbitrage opportunities disappear, everyone will see who truly has the substance.
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I've seen too many stacking strategies; most likely, they are just preludes to a blow-up.
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Core competitiveness vs. sustained high returns—it's really impossible to choose both.
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Honestly, I prefer the attitude of点赞 like "if there's something, take it; if not, be honest," over those forced stories.
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The market isn't that naive; sooner or later, everyone will see through the emperor's new clothes.
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GateUser-75ee51e7
· 12-27 13:16
Really, the moment I saw the funding rate thin out, I knew tough days were ahead.
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JustAnotherWallet
· 12-27 00:53
Well... this is a true reflection of my recent experience. Watching the APY drop makes me feel anxious. But on the other hand, being aware that this is not a sudden crash but the norm definitely makes me more alert than those still in a daze.
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LiquidatedTwice
· 12-27 00:52
Alright, you make some sense. But I still think most projects can't really fix this problem at all.
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AlgoAlchemist
· 12-27 00:51
Wake up, those who blindly chase high returns are doomed to fail.
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GateUser-7b078580
· 12-27 00:51
The data shows that historical lows often occur here. Let's wait a bit longer.
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MemeCoinSavant
· 12-27 00:41
ngl the whole "yield machine goes brrr then stops" arc is peak defi storytelling... protocols that built their entire identity on apy numbers are basically just waiting to get rekt when the music stops tbh
Yesterday, I opened the asset panel and saw that all-too-familiar scene: returns are declining.
It's not a free fall caused by a project explosion, but rather a quite "clean" correction. Funding rates have thinned out, arbitrage opportunities have become less lucrative, and even slight upticks are immediately snatched up.
Honestly, this isn't really an incident. It's the normal state when market competition is at its peak and simple opportunities are gradually disappearing.
The real question worth pondering isn't here—it's not about "how to bring APY back," but rather: **When returns are no longer the main selling point, can this system itself still stand firm?**
To put it more bluntly: if the only reason for a DeFi protocol's existence is "high yields," then once those yields vanish, it should probably fade away too. But looking at the design philosophy, some projects have done their homework in this area.
The binary split of USDf and sUSDf illustrates this well. USDf is never positioned as a "yield machine"; its functions are liquidity, being used, and building ecosystem infrastructure. sUSDf isn't promising eternal returns; it honestly states: sometimes it captures yields, and when it doesn't, it reflects that truth.
This distinction sounds simple, but the real difference lies here.
Many protocols, upon seeing yields decline, react first by mining new yields. Strategies become increasingly complex, risk margins expand outward, gradually drifting away from their original expertise. This approach might sustain for a while on the surface, but in reality, it's a gamble against market cycles—betting that they can always find new opportunities, betting that risks remain within controllable bounds.
But a more prudent approach should be to understand where your true core competitiveness lies, rather than being hostage to the illusion of "must maintain high yields."