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Michiel Milanovic

Nov 09 2022

DeFi Market Commentary | October 2022

TL;DR

  1. The crypto market has been stable in October relative to the broader macro environment. As a result, we are seeing a convergence in volatility of ETH and equities which may point to a decoupling of crypto and traditional markets.
  2. TVL remained at ~$70B throughout the month despite a series of high-profile hacks (Binance and Mango Markets) and SBF’s controversial proposal for DeFi regulation.
  3. Activity on DEXs continued to decline but predominantly affected Uniswap, putting a dent in its dominance. Lending protocols are seeing a fall in outstanding debt, along with a fall in stablecoins in circulation.

The price of ETH has hovered around $1300 for the majority of the month following a post-Merge dip. Prices have since increased to ~$1600 in line with a broader market recovery ahead of the November meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). A notable trend is the decline in 30-day realized volatility of ETH and BTC over the month, while similar volatility in equities has increased amidst poor quarterly earnings. This could indicate a potential decoupling between crypto and equities markets.

image 1 2
Source: CoinMarketCap

In decentralized finance (DeFi), market caps of the top 100 tokens increased relative to ETH, before reverting at the end of the month. The reason is that ETH has seen more amplified price swings in the Merge period, which is causing similar swings in the market cap of DeFi tokens relative to ETH. As we analyze in the following sections, DeFi activity has not fundamentally changed in the past month but there are signs of stability.

DeFi/ETH Market Cap Ratio

image 1 1
Source: TradingView

Total value locked (TVL) in DeFi has remained relatively stable over the past month at around $70B. This is below 2021 highs of $230B but nevertheless represents an 11% increase from the summer months. TVL seemed to be unaffected by a series of adverse events this month including high profile exploits and uncertainty around regulation. A possible reason is that the majority of users that would have left the ecosystem during the downturn have been washed out, leaving a remaining portion of power users in DeFi that are stickier and less affected by macro conditions.

Among the exploits was the manipulation of Solana-based Mango Markets. $114M was lost through a smart contract protocol loophole which saw malicious actors manipulate the native MNGO token. Meanwhile, Binance’s cross-chain bridge was attacked for a whopping $570M after a vulnerability enabled the hacker to withdraw 2M BNB tokens. Binance was able to limit 80-90% of the losses by pausing the network and coordinating with validators; a result of Binance Smart Chain being more centralized which has historically been viewed as controversial by the crypto community.

On the regulatory side, Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), founder of centralized exchange FTX and trading firm Alameda Research, came under fire for his proposals on DeFi regulation. SBF suggested that front-end DeFi interfaces should follow know-your-customer (KYC) obligations, which would require many popular protocols to, at the very least, link to centralized entities to perform the checks.

image 8
Source: The Block

Volume on decentralized exchanges (DEXs) fell 10% over the past month to $51B, but predominantly affected the leading exchange Uniswap. Share of volumes on Uniswap grew from 36% to 61% between May and August as users rapidly left smaller exchanges during the downturn. Activity in October, however, saw volume shares picking up on exchanges like Dodo and Curve, with Uniswap dropping to 57%. This could be a sign of confidence among DeFi users who are sticking to more specialized exchanges.

image
Source: The Block
image 1
Source: The Block

A similar observation can be made when comparing DEXs to their centralized counterparts. DEX to CEX volume saw an uplift in October to about 12%. This indicates that volume on centralized exchanges fell more than that on DEXs, which reiterates the notion of remaining users in DeFi more likely sticking with the ecosystem. 

image 2
Source: The Block

In line with Uniswap dominating exchange volumes, it also leads monthly protocol revenue, at $33.5M in October. This represents 69% of the total $44.5M across protocols, up from 64% in September. Interestingly, Uniswap grew its share of revenue despite losing share in volume, which indicates that smaller exchanges struggled to translate their growing share of volumes into revenue for users and token holders. This is most likely a result of a difference in fee structures, e.g. Curve charges as little as 0.04% on pool fees vs. Uniswap’s 0.3%.

image 3
Source: The Block

Net added liquidities in DEX liquidity pools have been rather muted in the last month with a few exceptions of liquidity leaving the ecosystem around mid-October. These outflows were consistent with a price drop in ETH at the time. Similarly, inflows picked up at the end of the month ahead of the FMOC November meeting. Overall, net added liquidities have been more stable than in previous months alongside stability in ETH prices.

image 5
Source: The Block

The amount of DAI outstanding on the leading DeFi lending protocol MakerDAO has decreased from $6.4B to $5.8B over the month of October. Lending activity is largely a function of idle capital and interest rates, which makes it strongly related to broader monetary policy. Tightening throughout 2022 has spurred a large outflow of capital towards government treasuries, where yields on short-term debt reached 3.7%. Meanwhile yields on stablecoins in leading DeFi protocols range between 0.7-1.5%, which is driving investors out of DeFi and into traditional financial markets. As such, we have seen a decrease in the amount stablecoins in circulation, including DAI. Theoretically, the difference in yields should be arbitraged away, but high friction between crypto and fiat is likely making the process less worthwhile for investors. Especially as uncertainty still exists around future monetary policy decisions.

image 6
Source: The Block

1-Month Treasury Rate

image 7
Source: Ycharts

Overall, activity across DeFi is showing signs of stabilizing. A large portion of capital has been washed out as a result of the broader macro environment, and remaining users appear to be less sensitive to adverse events. Despite total trade volumes falling, activity on smaller exchanges has picked up slightly and liquidity is entering pools on the back of an uptick in ETH prices. Looking forward, the question remains whether the further increase in rates announced at the November FMOC will put a larger dent in the ecosystem.


Cryptofunds, market makers, and trading desks can interact with these DeFi protocols with MetaMask Institutional

MetaMask Institutional offers unrivalled access to the DeFi ecosystem without compromising on institution-required security, operational efficiency, or compliance. We enable funds to trade, stake, borrow, lend, invest, and interact with over 17,000 DeFi protocols and applications.


Found this research useful? Connect with the ConsenSys Cryptoeconomic Research team at [email protected]


Disclaimer: ConsenSys Software Inc. is not a registered or licensed advisor or broker.  This report is for general informational purposes only.  It does not constitute or contain any individual investment advice and is made without any regard to the recipient’s objectives, financial situation, or means.  It is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy, any token or other investment, nor is it intended to be used for marketing purposes to anyone in any jurisdiction.  ConsenSys does not intend for any person or entity to rely on any facts, opinions, or ideas, and any financial or economic commentary expressed in this report may not be relied upon.  ConsenSys makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the information or opinions in this report and, along with its employees, does not assume any responsibility for any loss to any person or entity that may result from any act or omission based upon this report. This report is subject to correction, completion, and amendment without notice; however, ConsenSys has no obligation to do so. 

Written by Michiel Milanovic · Categorized: ConsenSys · Tagged: ConsenSys

Sep 29 2022

DeFi Market Commentary | September 2022

TL;DR

  1. Following the successful PoS upgrade on Ethereum in September, prices of ETH have fallen as narrative shifts back to macro conditions.
  2. Total Value Locked (TVL) in DeFi reverted -22% from an August spike as regulatory concerns surrounding Tornado Cash and its implications on the wider ecosystem spread.
  3. Volume in decentralized exchanges (DEXs) has declined in post-Summer months but early data from liquidity pools is positive as users re-stake assets to generate yield.

Our first DeFi market update in a post-Merge world explores key performance indicators in the period leading up to and following Ethereum’s PoS upgrade on September 15. Crypto markets followed the global recovery in market activity from June lows, with ETH experiencing a particularly strong rebound relative to BTC. The price of ETH touched $2k in August as traders increased spot purchases in light of potential airdrops (ETHPoW) and the changing tokenomics following the PoS upgrade. Prices have since dropped to ~$1350 as profit-taking set in and the narrative shifts back to the macro environment.

Screenshot 2022 09 26 185339
Source: CoinMarketCap

DeFi tokens have followed broader market patterns but with more amplified price swings. A good indicator is DeFi dominance, which measures the market cap of a basket of top DeFi protocols as a percentage of the total cryptocurrency market. In periods of market decline (e.g. 2Q22) DeFi dominance decreased, but in recent months it has grown to ~1.2% from June lows of 0.8% in line with the market recovery. A possible reason is that DeFi protocols are built on the rails of larger L1 ecosystems, and therefore display an element of leverage relative to the native L1 token. 

defi dominance 1
Source: The Block

In spite of this, fundamentals indicate that users are remaining cautious on DeFi overall. Total Value Locked (TVL) in DeFi across chains has reverted -22% from its August spike, back to lows of $55bn. A catalyst for the decline was the regulatory crackdown on Tornado Cash in August. The popular cryptocurrency mixer was investigated by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) resulting in smart contracts associated with the protocol being sanctioned. The effects were widespread and brought into question some of the control stablecoin providers have over users. Circle, the organization behind USDC and a popular onramp into DeFi, banned 38 wallet addresses associated with Tornado Cash. Similarly, the community of MakerDAO has recently been split over the proposal to decrease levels of centralized collateral of their stablecoin DAI.

A more recent development is the hack of algorithmic market maker Wintermute for $160m. The attack targeted a vulnerability found in the Profanity-generated vanity address, a form of custom wallet address, used by Wintermute to identify itself to third parties but also to save on high gas fees on Ethereum. Although the company has indicated it has a strong enough balance sheet to absorb the loss, the hack nevertheless put an additional dent in investor confidence.

value locked by blockchain
Source: The Block

Muted activity is apparent on decentralized exchanges (DEXs) as well, where volumes have continued to decline in recent months. One explanation is that investors are remaining cautious on altcoins in favor of blue-chip tokens during periods of heightened uncertainty. This would explain why DEXs have continued to lose share to centralized exchanges as displayed by DEX to CEX spot trade volume below. If so, the trend could continue in light of further economic tightening following the latest CPI print for August.

dex volume
Source: The Block
dex to cex spot trade volume 1
Source: The Block

However, daily data from liquidity pools suggest that users are re-staking assets into DEXs following the Merge. Users have largely been taking liquidity out of pools in the weeks leading up to the event, partially to benefit from a PoW airdrop but likely also due to loss of confidence following the Tornado Cash fallout. Early data shows that this trend is starting to reverse which could bring staking levels in line with the relatively stronger levels noted in July.

net added liquidities for dex liquidity pools daily 2
Source: The Block

While DEX volumes have fallen across the ecosystem, it has disproportionately affected smaller exchanges such as Curve. As a result, the leading decentralized exchange Uniswap has increased its share of volume to record levels of ~64% vs. ~48% in July. One reason for Uniswap’s resilience is its deep liquidity relative to other DEXs (and some CEXs) which results in less slippage than with smaller exchanges. The team behind Uniswap has also recently indicated it is exploring financialization of NFTs; a topic that has been under the spotlight with recent liquidation concerns surrounding NFT lending platform BendDAO.

share of dex volume monthly 1
Source: The Block

DeFi lenders saw a surge in borrowing ahead of the Merge with daily net borrowing reaching a 3-month high (displayed as negative net borrowing) in September across protocols. The prospect of an ETHPoW airdrop drove the growth in ETH borrowing on Aave in particular. Investors reportedly borrowed 100% of available ETH with rates reaching up to 190% APY, but have stabilized since the community triggered a vote to stop lending. Similar activity was recorded on Hop Protocol and Euler Finance, while some lenders like Compound put a cap on the amount that can be borrowed.

Screenshot 2022 09 26 185844
Source: Dune Analytics
Screenshot 2022 09 26 185917
Source: Aave

Finally, we observe that monthly DeFi protocol revenue is trending to a YTD low of $60m for September in line with the reduction in TVL and decreased volume on exchanges. Despite the aggregate decline, Aave benefitted from the increased activity on its platform in August with revenues increasing nearly three-fold relative to the prior month.

defi protocols revenues monthly 1
Source: The Block

There have been some notable market movements in the weeks leading up to the Merge, particularly around changes in user behavior in DeFi lending and exchanges. We note that the short term effects of the Merge on price activity have started to dissipate and the narrative is largely shifting back to broader monetary policy. Despite this, innovation within the DeFi ecosystem has shown persistence and early signs of liquidity flowing back into exchanges. Looking ahead, the effects of a successful Merge on Ethereum cannot be overstated, with energy usage down 99% and a deflationary native currency, we are entering a new era of adoption for the ecosystem.


Cryptofunds, market makers, and trading desks can interact with these DeFi protocols with MetaMask Institutional

MetaMask Institutional offers unrivalled access to the DeFi ecosystem without compromising on institution-required security, operational efficiency, or compliance. We enable funds to trade, stake, borrow, lend, invest, and interact with over 17,000 DeFi protocols and applications.


Found this research useful? Connect with the ConsenSys Cryptoeconomic Research team at [email protected]


Disclaimer: ConsenSys Software Inc. is not a registered or licensed advisor or broker.  This report is for general informational purposes only.  It does not constitute or contain any individual investment advice and is made without any regard to the recipient’s objectives, financial situation, or means.  It is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy, any token or other investment, nor is it intended to be used for marketing purposes to anyone in any jurisdiction.  ConsenSys does not intend for any person or entity to rely on any facts, opinions, or ideas, and any financial or economic commentary expressed in this report may not be relied upon.  ConsenSys makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the information or opinions in this report and, along with its employees, does not assume any responsibility for any loss to any person or entity that may result from any act or omission based upon this report. This report is subject to correction, completion, and amendment without notice; however, ConsenSys has no obligation to do so. 

Written by Michiel Milanovic · Categorized: ConsenSys · Tagged: ConsenSys

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