As yield potential aligns with matching utility, DeFi now resembles a stronger, stabler foundation for programmable financeAs yield potential aligns with matching utility, DeFi now resembles a stronger, stabler foundation for programmable finance

From yield to utility: The quiet repricing of risk in post-CeFi DeFi | Opinion

5 min read

Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial.

DeFi used to be associated with speculation and speed, but today it is a far cry from its predecessors. Once characterized by viral token incentives and high yields, the space changed to stability and governance after the implosions of centralized finance intermediaries in 2023/24 and a string of smart contract failures. 

Summary
  • DeFi has shifted from speculative, high-yield incentives to a focus on stability, governance, and utility after CeFi collapses and smart contract failures exposed the limits of yield-first growth.
  • Investors now prioritize risk management, transparency, security, and verifiable operations, driving capital toward utility-first protocols offering real services like data availability, settlement, and cross-chain coordination.
  • The market’s “utility repricing” marks DeFi’s maturation: flashy APRs are replaced by durable economic activity, liquidity retention, and returns rooted in genuine protocol performance — not speculative token emissions.

The time of chasing yield is over, as the era of weighing up utility is ushered in. A recent European Systemic Risk Board report on non-bank financial intermediation found that mismatches in liquidity and maturity now reflect those of traditional shadow banking systems, exposing limits of yield-first growth. 

In tandem, institutional surveys show that capital allocation remains cautious despite rising DeFi adoption, as risk metrics still lag behind returns on investment. Together, these studies shed light on the next step for DeFi, where risk is repriced rather than abandoned.

The protocols that generate verifiable utility, hone in on data accessibility, compute orchestration, and efficient real settlement solutions will survive; speculative APRs will not. 

The end of the yield illusion

In the early days of DeFi, participation equated to profit, with flash loans, staking derivatives, inflated returns, and liquidity mining. All the while, structural weaknesses were hiding in plain coded sight, as users earned rewards often denominated in volatile tokens with uncertain long-term value. 

CeFi was effectively a reflection of those same patterns, with lending platforms promising high yields with little transparency on how. When those structures fell apart, capital fled both CeFi and the speculative elements of DeFi in the wake of the fallout. 

Yield is not free: that is the lesson learned from these structural collapses, and knowing that every percentage point carries a corresponding risk, whether it’s liquidity, governance, or technological. At the end of the yield illusion, capital will continuously rotate back to safer systems, and it did, shifting back to on-chain systems. But this time, investors asked, “Who governs this protocol? What happens when XYZ fails? How are the Oracle dependencies managed?” 

These questions effectively marked the beginning of the maturity phase for DeFi, as risk management, protocol utility, and transparency became key indicators for value and sustainability. The answers came in the form of projects being judged on their code audit trails, economic sustainability mechanics, and the quality of governance. Capital from both institutions and retail began to favor systems that could demonstrate these qualities and operational resilience over high returns.

The utility repricing

The change in perspective and mentality saw protocols offer clearer, service-driven value for their users and investors. Elements like data availability, cross-chain coordination, and speed now draw in more concentrated pools of liquidity that stay. 

DeFi has clearly moved beyond marketing headlines and reward mechanics toward actual use cases to support greater retention of users and capital on its platforms. Returns, once extraordinary (and unstable), are now mirroring genuine economic throughput and similar numbers and stability that CeFi offers through regulated channels.

The repricing of risk is what has brought genuine value back to builders and investors alike, prioritizing security and sustained liquidity depth over flashy token incentive schemes. The notion of ‘total value locked’ is now giving way to total value actually retained, where funds gravitate toward transparent contracts and verifiable operations. 

The rise of utility-first protocols turns what was once casinos into complex marketplaces for exchanges of value, data, and compute. Due diligence is now the center of attention when it comes to considering the resilience of a protocol and the real-world implications versus theoretical APRs. 

Despite the higher ROI numbers fading to the fringes of DeFi, this momentum is not a negative outcome for the space; rather, it is a maturity of the market.  As yield potential aligns with matching utility, DeFi now resembles a stronger, stabler foundation for programmable finance. Now returns are earned through transparency, trust, and performance that stays when the going gets tough, not the other way around.

Blake Jeong

Blake Jeong is Co-CEO of IOST, building RWA-native blockchain infrastructure for institutional adoption, with a strong focus on compliance, scalability, and adoption. Blake has a proven track record of success, having been one of the starting members of a well-known startup backed by SoftBank and IMM, where he successfully managed three teams and grew the teams’ sales by ten times within less than two years. At IOST, Blake has already demonstrated his leadership skills by building a solid international team and forming successful partnerships.

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