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The natural selection of DeFi: survival of the fittest
Writing: Cryptographic
Compiled by: Block Unicorn
Preface
Nature is cold and ruthless; it has no emotions, no feelings, no attachments. It only conducts an endless test: whether this design is worth surviving.
Financial markets are the same. Over time, they eliminate weak designs, fragile structures, and strategies that fail to consider risks, integrating effective strategies. This is the essence of natural selection—a brutal, relentless test that ensures only the fittest survive.
DeFi is no exception. After years of experimentation and thousands of protocols, one pattern has become clear: each extinction event is less a “black swan” and more a result of natural selection removing the weak, ensuring only the strong endure.
Aave is a typical example.
Despite experiencing multiple extinction events in the industry, such as the Luna collapse, FTX, and the most notorious abuse of client deposits by effective altruists in crypto, Aave’s lending market still holds hundreds of billions of dollars in deposits. Just v3 continues to lead in DeFi lending TVL.
Aave’s survival and dominance are not accidental but stem from compounded conservative parameters and a culture that assumes counterparties can fail and plans accordingly.
This brings us to Stream Finance and the latest round of natural selection.
Stream Finance
Stream Finance positions itself as a yield primitive, issuing synthetic assets (xUSD, xBTC, xETH). Users can mint these assets with deposits and then deploy the newly minted synthetic assets into DeFi. These synthetic tokens are widely used as collateral and embedded into lending markets and select vaults.
When an external manager responsible for overseeing Stream assets reports a loss of $93 million, Stream is forced to suspend deposits and withdrawals, causing xUSD to decouple from the dollar. Meanwhile, YAM has linked $285 million in loans and stablecoin exposure to collateral related to Stream, covering derivatives like Euler, Silo, Morpho, and deUSD stablecoins.
This is not a failure of smart contracts but a failure of architecture and design, caused by a lack of transparency and issues such as:
What should have been a fully isolated system turned out to be tightly coupled. When Stream’s entrusted funds disappeared and xUSD decoupled, the losses did not stay isolated but spread across markets and platforms built on the same underlying collateral. The original independent vault + custodian model failed, transforming what should have been a single point of failure into a systemic problem.
Isolated Vault + Custodian Model
Stream exposes the fragility of the current isolated vault + custodian model, which operates as follows:
In theory, each vault should have an independent isolation layer, with custodians being experts with necessary experience and domain knowledge. Risks should be transparent and modular.
However, in practice, Stream’s bankruptcy reveals three main flaws:
Natural Selection
Nature is the best teacher, and its lessons are clear: the illusion of isolation based on common interests is just that—a illusion.
Stream Finance exemplifies how natural selection works best: it eliminates weak designs that prioritize growth over resilience, yield over transparency, and market share over survival.
The isolated vault + custodian model isn’t inherently flawed, but it currently fails the most basic test. Will it survive? When issuers fail, collateral evaporates, and chain claims reveal that “isolation” is just marketing, can it endure?
Aave has survived because it assumes failure; Stream collapsed because it assumed trust.
Markets, as always, express their views through the brutal laws of natural selection—effective versus ineffective. Protocols that externalize risk, leverage opaque collateral, chase yields over survivability, will have no second chances. They will be liquidated, and their total locked value redistributed to truly effective protocols.
DeFi no longer needs endless hype about yield mechanisms. It needs more rigorous design, transparent collateral, and decision-makers willing to bear more risk. The protocols that survive will be those capable of handling counterparty defaults, assuming market stress rather than stability, and turning conservatism into dominance.
Nature doesn’t care about your TVL or your APY; it only cares whether your design can survive the next extinction event.
And the next one is already here.