DeFi Products Are Exploding, But Maturity and Security Concerns Remain

As bitcoin extends its historic rally and tops $38,000 for the third time this week, investors looking to gain cryptocurrency exposure are turning to decentralized finance solutions.  Decentralized exchange trading volumes reached a record high of $55 billion last month.  Uniswap, […]

article-image
share

key takeaways

  • Uniswap is up about 300 percent year-to-date, making up 45 percent of total volumes on decentralized exchanges
  • DeFi tech is still very new, so some worry about security

As bitcoin extends its historic rally and tops $38,000 for the third time this week, investors looking to gain cryptocurrency exposure are turning to decentralized finance solutions. 

Decentralized exchange trading volumes reached a record high of $55 billion last month. 

Uniswap, the fourth-largest DeFi platform, was the frontrunner, making up 45 percent of total volume traded with nearly $30 billion last month. Uniswap is up about 300 percent year-to-date.  

Source: CryptoRank 

DeFi platforms Maker and Aave are also seeing record returns in 2021. Maker is up more than 400 percent and Aave is seeing returns just shy of 500 percent.

“There’s a lot of enthusiasm in the market,” said Ken Deeter, partner at Electric Capital. “You can also expect to see growth with earlier stage startups, which in the traditional market would also command higher multiples because people are expecting growth in the product.” 

The DeFi industry is currently in what is known as the “first wave.” Most platforms have only been around for two years, and while investors praise DeFi for its convenience, Deeter acknowledged that there are privacy and security concerns, given the nascent and unregulated nature of the industry. 

“People are deploying these new systems at breakneck speed right now,” said Deeter. “It makes me a little bit nervous about how safe this stuff really is.” 

The purpose of DeFi is to eliminate the intermediaries associated with traditional finance. These products are, in theory, supposed to be fee-free, although this isn’t always the case. Unipswap users pay a flat fee of 0.3 percent for all trades, which is sent to a liquidity reserve. 

Deeter pointed out that the overall newness of digital currencies is bound to lead to some growing pains. 

“It’s cool to see people enthused, but a lot of the enthusiasm right now is probably a little bit misplaced,” said Deeter. “There’s not enough sophistication in the market around crypto in general.”

Tags

Upcoming Events

Javits Center North | 445 11th Ave

Tues - Thurs, March 18 - 20, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Research

article-image

MicroStrategy’s bitcoin buying has exploded — it now holds 1.7% of the asset’s circulating supply

article-image

The MiCA era will reward the prepared and punish the rest

article-image

The market is, presumably, confused about what a Trump win means for the social media company

article-image

There were previous reports that Lutnick — a leader of Trump’s transition team — was in the running for treasury secretary

article-image

Let’s quickly run through some of the events leading up to these listings

article-image

“You’re gonna, at least for a period of time, wish you’d had a million bucks in solana”