How can DeFi regain its âsafe havenâ role during structural frictions?
The game between the U.S. and China has once again entered a phase of concrete confrontation, with auto tariffs suddenly jumping to 125%. This kind of tariff war is nothing new, but this âupgraded versionâ has indeed reignited that classic âglobal resonanceâ pressure across capital markets.
Stocks, commodities, and bond markets all displayed varying degrees of risk-off behavior. Meanwhile, the crypto marketâs reaction was surprisingly mild. That got me thinking:
Is DeFi, in such structural friction, regaining its role as a âsafe havenâ?
I used to be skeptical of this idea, but my thoughts are gradually shifting. Here are some of my recent observations and reflections:
In March, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution that was highly favorable to DeFi users:
Temporarily overturning the IRS requirement for on-chain protocols to report user transactions.
This is actually quite a significant signal. While it doesnât mean âtax exemption,â it does suggest that the tax compliance pressure on on-chain interactions has been eased in the short term.
This opens up a subtle yet crucial window: users can regain confidence in on-chain asset allocation within a less regulatory-frictioned environment.
To me, this resembles how international capital once used offshore markets as âlow-friction channels.â DeFi may well be assuming the prototype of that role.
The greater the market uncertainty, the more capital seeks structurally predictable pathsâeven if the returns arenât high.
Thatâs why staking products are regaining attention. You stake assets on the mainnet and receive protocol-level rewards. The logic is clear, the path is predictable, and volatility is relatively low.
Especially in ecosystems like Avalanche, where staked tokens (e.g., sAVAX) can still participate in other DeFi activities like lending or liquidity mining. This way, users retain their staking yield without fully sacrificing liquidity.
This essentially creates an on-chain logic that resembles âstructured financial productsâ:
Yield comes from base-layer protocols; risk is concentrated in mainnet security and DeFi contract layers; the path and expectations are reusable and traceable.
No one knows exactly how taxes will be levied or how regulation will evolve, but one thing is certain: protocols with complete on-chain records and clear structure will have stronger long-term survivability than those relying on opaque operations.
One project Iâve been following lately is BENQI. Itâs not a breakout star, but it follows a standard path:
Users stake AVAX â Receive sAVAX â Use it as collateral for borrowing or in liquidity pools.
The entire asset path is traceable, contract actions are public, and itâs friendly for future compliance.
This combination of âstructure + transparencyâ effectively becomes a moat at this stage. It may not deliver sky-high returns immediately, but it offers long-term stability over time.
In the past, many used DeFi as a âtool for arbitrage.â Today, more and more people are building âasset structures.â
For example:
The entire process isnât complex, but what it represents is no longer just a speculative playâitâs an on-chain structured yield model, comparable to actively managed portfolio assets.
From this perspective, DeFi is slowly shedding its âhigh-risk, high-volatilityâ label and evolving into more mature financial instruments.
My current attitude towards DeFi is:
It may not be a window for explosive profits, but it could be the most worthwhile stage to build structures and accumulate positions before the next bull market.
If you believe macro uncertainty will persist;
If you donât want all your assets exposed to high volatility;
If you hope tax, compliance, and on-chain yields will eventually align into a cohesive systemâ
Then building an on-chain structured yield portfolio might be a worthwhile move.
BENQI and sAVAX may not be the ultimate solutions, but their models and mechanisms do possess qualities of âexplainability, composability, and iterabilityââmaking them great experimental tools for such structures.
We donât know when the next cycle will come. But starting to build the structure now is never the wrong direction.
This article is reprinted from [Techflow]. The copyright belongs to the original author [0xresearcher]. If you have any objections to the reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team. The team will handle it as soon as possible according to relevant procedures.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article represent only the authorâs personal views and do not constitute any investment advice.
Other language versions of the article are translated by the Gate Learn team. The translated article may not be copied, distributed or plagiarized without mentioning Gate.io.
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How can DeFi regain its âsafe havenâ role during structural frictions?
The game between the U.S. and China has once again entered a phase of concrete confrontation, with auto tariffs suddenly jumping to 125%. This kind of tariff war is nothing new, but this âupgraded versionâ has indeed reignited that classic âglobal resonanceâ pressure across capital markets.
Stocks, commodities, and bond markets all displayed varying degrees of risk-off behavior. Meanwhile, the crypto marketâs reaction was surprisingly mild. That got me thinking:
Is DeFi, in such structural friction, regaining its role as a âsafe havenâ?
I used to be skeptical of this idea, but my thoughts are gradually shifting. Here are some of my recent observations and reflections:
In March, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution that was highly favorable to DeFi users:
Temporarily overturning the IRS requirement for on-chain protocols to report user transactions.
This is actually quite a significant signal. While it doesnât mean âtax exemption,â it does suggest that the tax compliance pressure on on-chain interactions has been eased in the short term.
This opens up a subtle yet crucial window: users can regain confidence in on-chain asset allocation within a less regulatory-frictioned environment.
To me, this resembles how international capital once used offshore markets as âlow-friction channels.â DeFi may well be assuming the prototype of that role.
The greater the market uncertainty, the more capital seeks structurally predictable pathsâeven if the returns arenât high.
Thatâs why staking products are regaining attention. You stake assets on the mainnet and receive protocol-level rewards. The logic is clear, the path is predictable, and volatility is relatively low.
Especially in ecosystems like Avalanche, where staked tokens (e.g., sAVAX) can still participate in other DeFi activities like lending or liquidity mining. This way, users retain their staking yield without fully sacrificing liquidity.
This essentially creates an on-chain logic that resembles âstructured financial productsâ:
Yield comes from base-layer protocols; risk is concentrated in mainnet security and DeFi contract layers; the path and expectations are reusable and traceable.
No one knows exactly how taxes will be levied or how regulation will evolve, but one thing is certain: protocols with complete on-chain records and clear structure will have stronger long-term survivability than those relying on opaque operations.
One project Iâve been following lately is BENQI. Itâs not a breakout star, but it follows a standard path:
Users stake AVAX â Receive sAVAX â Use it as collateral for borrowing or in liquidity pools.
The entire asset path is traceable, contract actions are public, and itâs friendly for future compliance.
This combination of âstructure + transparencyâ effectively becomes a moat at this stage. It may not deliver sky-high returns immediately, but it offers long-term stability over time.
In the past, many used DeFi as a âtool for arbitrage.â Today, more and more people are building âasset structures.â
For example:
The entire process isnât complex, but what it represents is no longer just a speculative playâitâs an on-chain structured yield model, comparable to actively managed portfolio assets.
From this perspective, DeFi is slowly shedding its âhigh-risk, high-volatilityâ label and evolving into more mature financial instruments.
My current attitude towards DeFi is:
It may not be a window for explosive profits, but it could be the most worthwhile stage to build structures and accumulate positions before the next bull market.
If you believe macro uncertainty will persist;
If you donât want all your assets exposed to high volatility;
If you hope tax, compliance, and on-chain yields will eventually align into a cohesive systemâ
Then building an on-chain structured yield portfolio might be a worthwhile move.
BENQI and sAVAX may not be the ultimate solutions, but their models and mechanisms do possess qualities of âexplainability, composability, and iterabilityââmaking them great experimental tools for such structures.
We donât know when the next cycle will come. But starting to build the structure now is never the wrong direction.
This article is reprinted from [Techflow]. The copyright belongs to the original author [0xresearcher]. If you have any objections to the reprint, please contact the Gate Learn team. The team will handle it as soon as possible according to relevant procedures.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article represent only the authorâs personal views and do not constitute any investment advice.
Other language versions of the article are translated by the Gate Learn team. The translated article may not be copied, distributed or plagiarized without mentioning Gate.io.