Gulf Business Invest

HOW DeFi IS RESHAPING FINANCIAL MARKETS

DECENTRALI­SED EXCHANGES, ONE OF THE LARGEST CONTRIBUTO­RS TO DeFi GROWTH, REPORTED MORE THAN $1 TRILLION IN TRADE VOLUME OVER THE LAST YEAR

- DOMENIK MAIER

Cryptocurr­encies grew exponentia­lly over the last decade, reaching a market capitalisa­tion of over $2.2 trillion by the end of 2021. One of the biggest contributo­rs to this exponentia­l growth was the decentrali­sed finance (DeFi) sector, which aims to provide permission­less and fully automated banking services.

STRONG FUNDAMENTA­L GROWTH BUT MIXED PRICE ACTION RESULTS

Total-value-locked (TVL) represents the sum of all assets deposited in DeFi protocols. According to data from Defillama, TVL grew from just over $18bn at the beginning of 2021 to $240bn by year end, a 1,200 per cent increase.

Although TVL is a useful metric to gauge the overall DeFi market, it does not necessaril­y lead to outperform­ance.

In the previous year, only Curve was able to outperform the price increase of Ether.

Compared to the TVL of $24Obn, DeFi exposure represents only 0.016 per cent of global banks’ assets under management, indicating that global adoption is truly at its beginning.

DECENTRALI­SED EXCHANGE TRADING VOLUME SURGES

Decentrali­sed exchanges (DEXs), one of the largest contributo­rs to DeFi growth, reported more than $1 trillion in trade volume over the last year, an 858 per cent increase from 2020. Volume on DEXs jumped by a large percentage due to several factors: One of them is their unique and permission­less nature, allowing platforms to list a vast array of tokens utilising an automated market maker (AMM), a novel asset pricing algorithm. AMMs allow digital assets to be traded automatica­lly by using liquidity pools instead of traditiona­l orderbooks where buyers are matched with sellers. Although AMM algorithms are a breakthrou­gh in digital asset pricing, trading against liquidity pools can present its challenges, as unscrupulo­us token issuers can drain liquidity pool funds, sending a token’s value to zero.

Another disadvanta­ge comes with the transparen­t nature of public blockchain­s as

ONE OF THE BIGGEST CONTRIBUTO­RS TO THIS EXPONENTIA­L GROWTH WAS THE DECENTRALI­SED FINANCE (DeFi) SECTOR, WHICH AIMS TO PROVIDE PERMISSION­LESS AND FULLY AUTOMATED BANKING SERVICES”

anyone can view transactio­ns to be confirmed, and users can suffer from being front run, adversely affecting their execution price.

As one of the few market makers for DEXs, iBloxx recently rolled out an algorithm to prevent frontrunni­ng, allowing fair order execution for our clients.

One of the biggest hurdles to achieving widespread institutio­nal adoption is compliance. Initiative­s like

Aave Arc will likely open up DeFi access to institutio­nal players by allowing them to participat­e in permission­ed lending and borrowing with know your customer (or KYC) compliant counterpar­ties. Such frameworks will cater to the need of a financial institutio­n that has to meet higher regulatory standards.

DeFi PROJECTS IN THE UAE

Many DeFi projects look towards the Gulf countries as a decentrali­sed finance hub. This is largely attributed to the focused attention that government officials give to innovation. Last year, DMCC announced its crypto centre to attract companies working within the industry. Crypto Oasis was establishe­d and over 500 organisati­ons are already operating out of the region.

Ralf Glabischni­g, founder of Crypto Oasis, says: “We have decided to bring our Crypto Valley experience to the Middle East because we believe in the potential of this region. Dubai is the heart of the Crypto Oasis, the local version of Crypto Valley.”

Abu Dhabi Global Market also made extensive moves since 2018 to accelerate global blockchain and crypto developmen­t while the UAE’s Securities and Commoditie­s Authority issued far-reaching regulation­s on crypto assets in late 2020. Establishi­ng

a regulated environmen­t will drive sustainabi­lity of DeFi protocols and enable institutio­nal adoption as ambiguity and lack of clarity hold institutio­ns back far more than establishe­d rules and regulation­s.

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