
Three weeks in the past, alarm bells started to ring over a “daisy chain of circular lending” between crypto yield-farming vaults.
Since then, the spectacular collapse of Stream Finance noticed depegs, dangerous debt and thousands and thousands of {dollars} trapped in low-liquidity markets.
The responses of a few of the “curators” behind the vaults has left one thing to be desired, nevertheless. Curators are answerable for setting parameters on permissionless lending markets used to lever up consumer deposits.
Re7 Labs’ ‘extensive update’ proves a nothingburger
Re7 Labs has been comparatively quiet over its vaults’ purported $27 million of publicity to the collapse.
The final submit with any actual element got here virtually two weeks in the past, earlier than customers had been requested final Friday to “bear with us” and maintain out for an “extensive update… in the first half of next week.”
Yesterday night, the long-awaited replace got here. The submit (replies disabled) states that Re7 Labs is “actively moving forward with… legal actions, and assessing the likelihood of recovery.”
Nonetheless, it’s but to obtain any “satisfactory response” from counterparties Stream Finance or Secure Labs.
Customers weren’t impressed. One requested merely, “Is this a joke?” whereas one other pointed to the submit’s delay and lack of substance.
A 3rd described Re7 Labs’ technique as “Delay and Dilute” whereas “building a future liability-shielding narrative.”
A fourth consumer’s remark reads, “Handing over money for you to manage is truly eight lifetimes of bad luck.”
Silo customers miss liquidity window
Silo Finance yesterday introduced a $1.5 million compensation to the xUSD/USDC market on Arbitrum. The liquidity was snapped up inside half an hour, with Silo’s submit coming 28 minutes after the final vital withdrawal.
Customers who had been unable to withdraw had been upset at having missed the window. To some, pro-rata socialized losses could be preferable to a first-come, first-served system through which fortunate customers are made entire, plus curiosity.
They accuse Silo Finance of “backroom deals” with Varlamore, the supervisor of the vault in query. Varlamore’s web site, as one other consumer highlighted, states the agency “consists of builders from Silo and more.”
Different customers chimed in. One known as the transfer “shady af” and one other mentioned “this fake refund is just a publicity stunt.”
A number of customers claimed to have been banned from Silo’s Discord for urgent the matter.
Silo didn’t instantly tackle these considerations, as a substitute saying an extra $645,000 of repayments in precisely the identical method.
Euler’s compensation dilemma
A governance discussion board submit to Euler Finance argues that, whereas “Euler bears no legal liability…, the reputational risk and user confidence impact are undeniable.”
Most feedback help the thought, with the occasional warning towards “any smash-and-grab treasury policy.”
One reply argues the request is “like asking Uniswap for compensation because a pool has been rug pulled” and that enormous EUL holders would vote down any such proposal.
A response from Euler Labs states the “protocol operated as designed throughout.” Nonetheless, it encourages the governance course of and “will not participate in the vote to avoid any conflicts of interest.”
Lido’s Hasu argues compensating customers units a precedent whereby “curators and unworthy borrowers capture the upside, while downside risks are outsourced to Euler.”
Extra broadly, GFX Labs’ PaperImperium believes platforms similar to Euler and Morpho ought to shield their fame by “run[ning] as quickly as they can away from hosting their own branded front ends.”
It advocate “an arm’s length third-party front end,” evaluating the state of affairs to a menu being blamed for a nasty meal.
