Karak wants to introduce ‘universal restaking’ for everyone

Users using Karak will be able to restake any asset on any chain, Karak founders explain

article-image

Andalusia Labs and Adobe Stock modified by Blockworks

share

A universal restaking layer designed by the Andalusia Labs team has emerged from stealth to launch its mainnet today. Karak is the universal restaking layer that makes it easy to provide crypto-economic security with any asset, and unlocks a new design space for developers to seamlessly and securely create innovative infrastructure designs.

The company is based in San Francisco and Abu Dhabi. It previously raised $50 million at a $1 billion valuation from investors including Coinbase, Mubadala — an Abu Dhabi Sovereign Wealth Fund — Lightspeed, Bain Capital, Pantera Capital, Framework Ventures and others. 

Raouf Ben-Har, the co-founder of Karak, told Blockworks that Karak was created to solve the problem of fragmented crypto-economic security in the space, which was preventing startups from finding initial success with their projects. 

Read more: Q&A: What will the Bitcoin halving mean for Bitcoin L2s?

“They were struggling to bootstrap their own economic security and suffered from highly dilutive reward mechanisms, which was unfortunate, especially for critical infrastructure like bridges, oracles and other infrastructure layers,” Ben-Har said.

For this reason, Ben-Har and his co-founder Drew Patel decided to create a universal layer of trust applicable across any software. This would enable developers to bypass the need to start from scratch and avoid being confined exclusively to Ethereum for security measures.

“We envisioned Karak as the key to unlocking this new era of innovation. Similar to how AWS made it easy and affordable for developers to access and build on the cloud, we wanted to make it easy and affordable for developers to access and build on any trust network,” he said.

Read more: Nirvana Cloud debuts as blockchain-optimized alternative to AWS and Google Cloud

According to Patel, there are similarities between EigenLayer and Karak, in the sense that both teams are building a staking protocol that enables other projects to access economic security to infrastructure layers.

“Similar to EigenLayer, Karak has its own version of AVSs dubbed Validation-as-a-Service, or VaaS,” Patel said. “However, unlike EigenLayer, which enshrines itself solely on Ethereum, Karak introduces this idea of universal security, or restaking for everyone, where anyone can provide crypto-economics with any asset on any chain.”

Ben-Har remarks that the security of a restaked protocol is often measured by the dollars that underlie its economic security. With Karak, this means that these dollars can be provided by assets beyond ETH without compromising security. 

“Many assets have lower opportunity costs versus ETH, meaning the [VaaS] has an easier and much more viable path to sustainable yields,” Ben-Har said. 

Read more: Restaking is a ticking time bomb

Ben-Har explains that in an ETH-only environment, the AVS would have to compete against every ETH yield opportunity with a new, novel risk profile — something that is not sustainable without airdrop speculation. 

“There are billions of untapped assets, like stTIA, ARB, and many others, with very few yield opportunities to create sustainable flywheels for VaaS building in their ecosystem,” he said. “Each ecosystem is different and has its own unique protocols that will create different VaaSs designed on top of their assets. There is no one-size-fits-all for every chain.”

The team notes that they are currently experimenting with different ways to use the xERC20 standard and various message bridges to reduce liquidity fragmentation across liquid restaked tokens. They hope that this will allow them to create a universal liquidity layer across chains to alleviate supply-demand mismatches.

Updated April 9, 2024 at 9:05 am ET: Clarified to note that Karak is not a layer-2, but rather a restaking layer with K2 being built on top of it.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

  • Blockworks Daily: The newsletter that helps thousands of investors understand crypto and the markets, by Byron Gilliam.
  • Empire: Start your morning with the top news and analysis to inform your day in crypto.
  • Forward Guidance: Reporting and analysis on the growing intersection of crypto and macroeconomics, policy and finance.
  • 0xResearch: Alpha directly in your inbox. Market highlights, data, degen trade ideas, governance updates, token performance and more.
  • Lightspeed: Built for Solana investors, developers and community members. The latest from one of crypto’s hottest networks.
  • The Drop: For crypto collectors and traders, covering apps, games, memes and more.
  • Supply Shock: Tracking Bitcoin’s rise from internet plaything worth less than a penny to global phenomenon disrupting money as we know it.
Tags

Upcoming Events

Industry City | Brooklyn, NY

TUES - THURS, JUNE 24 - 26, 2025

Permissionless IV serves as the definitive gathering for crypto’s technical founders, developers, and builders to come together and create the future.If you’re ready to shape the future of crypto, Permissionless IV is where it happens.

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 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

The platform also rolled out 13 tokenized funds for institutions on the Connect platform

article-image

The company’s expanded lineup introduces new ETF products, as more and more issuers get into crypto funds

article-image

President Donald Trump announced a 10% levy on almost all goods and additional tariffs on so-called “worst offending” countries

article-image

Solana may be in “recomposition” mode, as new protocols put usefulness ahead of mere virality

article-image

The stablecoin issuer will have to contend with bigger players and the interest rates environment

article-image

The president reportedly was still working on his tariff policy plans late Tuesday evening