Recent Mass Shutdowns of DeFi Protocols: They All Have One Thing in Common

marsbitPublicado a 2026-03-06Actualizado a 2026-03-06

Resumen

In recent months, multiple DeFi protocols have announced shutdowns, not due to exit scams but because of a lack of users, funding, or both. Projects like Angle Protocol, Polynomial, MilkyWay, and Step Finance—despite having functional products and significant past traction—were unable to sustain operations. Common challenges included an inability to attract liquidity (especially critical in derivatives), failure to achieve product-market fit, and high costs of expanding to new chains or narratives. Many teams pivoted repeatedly to chase trends like restaking or real-world assets but ran out of capital before finding sustainable demand. Others, like ZeroLend, suffered from deploying on smaller blockchains that lost liquidity during market downturns. Despite these failures, the projects shut down responsibly, allowing users to withdraw funds and avoiding reckless token launches—a sign of industry maturation compared to the reckless exits of 2022.

Author: Ignas

Compiled by: Chopper, Foresight News

Over the past two months, at least 10 crypto protocols have announced their closure. Not rug pulls, but due to no users, no money, or both.

Not to mention mining companies like BlockFills and lending platforms freezing withdrawals. Just yesterday, Angle also announced (https://x.com/AngleProtocol/status/2029161525580112263) the gradual shutdown of its EURA and USDA stablecoins, despite having reached a Total Value Locked (TVL) of $250 million and having strong business partnerships.

Angle stated bluntly in the announcement, "The decentralized stablecoin landscape has completely changed. Yield-bearing stablecoins today are essentially just branded wrappers over existing vaults and lending protocols; there's no longer a need to maintain a separate, independent infrastructure."

These shuttered projects almost all had functional products:

  • Polynomial processed a cumulative trading volume of $4 billion across 70 markets
  • MilkyWay's TVL once reached $250 million
  • Step Finance had a peak of 300,000 monthly active users

I've used, or at least tried, these products. The technology wasn't the issue, but no one was willing to pay the fees needed for the projects to survive.

MilkyWay is a typical example: four pivots in less than two years. Starting with Celestia liquid staking, then moving to restaking, RWA tokenization, and crypto debit cards for rent payments... each pivot chased the hype of the moment.

Their description of the restaking pivot is poignant: "We identified the restaking opportunity early, designed the system, TVL to $250M, completed security audits, and were ready to launch. But the market moved on from restaking faster than anyone anticipated."

In the end, they had to admit the funding wouldn't last long enough to find product-market fit.

The Polynomial team was brutally honest about the reason for failure, offering a lesson for all perpetual contract projects: "In derivatives, good tech is useless. We improved execution speed, optimized UX, built innovative infrastructure, but none of it mattered. Traders go where the liquidity is. We didn't have it. Everything else is just a nice-to-have feature."

The conclusion is even harsher: "Liquidity is the only moat in derivatives. You can't beat liquidity with innovation, you can't beat it with marketing, you can't beat it with development."

ZeroLend's shutdown sounds a warning bell for dApps trying to launch on multiple blockchains. They bet on supporting projects on niche chains like Manta, Zircuit, and Xlayer, but when the market turned bearish, liquidity on these chains dried up, and oracle providers stopped their services.

Ultimately, operating at a long-term loss was unsustainable.

Aave recently also voted to shut down services on several chains, citing the same reason of unprofitable operation.

Then there's Parsec, once a legendary tool in the circle used to track Terra, 3AC, and the stETH depeg. But the team admitted, "After the FTX collapse, DeFi spot trading, lending, and leverage never returned to their former state. The market changed, on-chain behavior changed, and we didn't truly understand it."

Simply put, the market moved on, and we were left behind. The market is cruel.

Slingshot was acquired and completely shut down. Eden cut 80% of its unprofitable products, keeping only the core business.

As they said, "The 80/20 rule became a reality; the products that cost us 80% of our expenses brought in only 20% of the revenue."

Finally, Step Finance's case is more unique: it was hacked for $26 million on January 31st, which was a death sentence. "We tried fundraising, acquisition, nothing worked."

What's the common thread among these deceased projects? They failed to adapt to the ever-changing market and lacked sufficient capital to pivot again.

Each team bet on a particular ecosystem experiencing explosive growth, but the growth either wasn't fast enough or didn't happen at all. Celestia DeFi never truly took off, on-chain derivatives struggled to compete with Hyperliquid, and even established platforms like dYdX and GMX are having a hard time.

And expanding into new chains and narrative areas is costly.

For players like me, moving funds from one platform to another is effortless and cheap. But applications need to invest significant time and financial resources to prepare for potential new user bases.

The good news is, these were all "dignified deaths." All projects gave users time to withdraw funds; the teams didn't run away or issue tokens to cash out. Compared to the outright rug pulls of 2022, the industry has indeed learned to die responsibly.

Preguntas relacionadas

QWhat is the common reason behind the recent shutdowns of multiple DeFi protocols?

AThe common reason is that these protocols failed to adapt to the rapidly changing market conditions and lacked sufficient funding to pivot or sustain operations, despite having functional products.

QAccording to Angle Protocol, why did they decide to shut down their stablecoin operations?

AAngle Protocol stated that the decentralized stablecoin landscape has fundamentally changed, and yield-bearing stablecoins are now essentially just branded wrappers over existing vaults and lending protocols, making it unnecessary to maintain independent infrastructure.

QWhat did Polynomial identify as the only moat in the derivatives space?

APolynomial identified liquidity as the only moat in the derivatives space, emphasizing that innovation, marketing, or development cannot overcome the advantage of liquidity.

QWhat lesson did ZeroLend's shutdown provide for decentralized applications?

AZeroLend's shutdown served as a warning for dApps launching on multiple blockchains, as betting on smaller chains like Manta and Xlayer led to liquidity drying up and oracle services halting when the bear market hit.

QHow did the shutdowns of these protocols demonstrate responsible behavior compared to past incidents?

AThese protocols allowed users time to withdraw funds, did not engage in exit scams, and avoided issuing worthless tokens, showing that the industry has learned to 'die responsibly' compared to the outright fraud seen in 2022.

Lecturas Relacionadas

Huang Renxun Dramatically 'Saves' South Korean Stock Market

In early June, South Korea's stock market experienced a sharp decline, with the KOSPI index dropping over 5% and triggering a trading halt. Amid this volatility, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang's visit to Seoul provided a dramatic boost to market sentiment. During his trip, Huang held a dinner meeting with SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won and SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung. He announced that NVIDIA's new Vera CPU would utilize SK Hynix DRAM and confirmed a multi-year technical collaboration between the two companies. This partnership aims to co-develop next-generation memory for NVIDIA's AI infrastructure roadmap, covering products from data center supercomputers to personal AI devices. Huang also publicly commented that AI company stocks were attractively priced. A key announcement was that NVIDIA's upcoming Vera Rubin AI supercomputer systems will use HBM4 memory, with supply qualifications granted to all three major suppliers: SK Hynix, Samsung Electronics, and Micron Technology. Despite this multi-sourcing strategy, Huang warned that the industry-wide chip shortage, affecting everything from wafers to packaging, is expected to persist for several years due to relentless demand from global AI factory construction. The collaboration extends beyond memory supply. SK Hynix will employ NVIDIA's AI platforms and Omniverse digital twin technology to enhance its own semiconductor design, simulation, and manufacturing processes, aiming for more autonomous factory operations. This visit builds upon a prior October 2025 agreement for SK Group to build a large-scale AI data center using over 50,000 NVIDIA GPUs. Huang's itinerary also included meetings with other Korean giants like Hyundai, LG, and Samsung, indicating NVIDIA's broader strategy to deepen ties with South Korea's tech industry.

链捕手Hace 4 hora(s)

Huang Renxun Dramatically 'Saves' South Korean Stock Market

链捕手Hace 4 hora(s)

When Inference Becomes a Scarce Resource, Who Captures the Value?

When Inference Becomes the Scarce Resource, Who Captures the Value? The core AI bottleneck has shifted from model training to inference (runtime execution). While concerns persisted about an "AI compute gap"—initially a $200B, now a $600B problem—the market is now recognizing that the solution and value lie in the inference layer. Nvidia's financial restructuring around "serving tokens" and Cerebras's successful IPO highlight this shift. Inference is a recurring, usage-based cost, estimated to be 10-50x larger than the one-time training market, especially with the rise of agentic AI. The inference stack spans six layers: silicon (e.g., Nvidia), bare metal (e.g., CoreWeave), GPU rental/aggregation, deployment/optimization, model APIs, and end applications. Most companies operate in one layer. However, Hyperbolic uniquely spans three layers (GPU rental, deployment, and model APIs) without owning any hardware. It aggregates fragmented GPU supply from multiple cloud providers into a standardized pool, offering developers the cheapest available compute through intelligent routing. Its multi-cloud aggregation creates a data moat and a flywheel: more supply leads to better pricing data and liquidity, attracting more developers and providers. In contrast, applications like Venice operate at the top of the stack, reselling privacy-wrapped inference but remaining dependent on and constrained by the underlying compute costs they purchase. As inference demand explodes, value accrues not just to consumer applications but increasingly to the aggregation and routing layer that captures their cost of revenue. The coming potential GPU oversupply reinforces this dynamic. While hardware owners may suffer from depreciation, asset-light aggregators like Hyperbolic benefit from price arbitrage, routing workloads to the cheapest available capacity. The ultimate winner in the inference economy may not be the entity with the most GPUs, but the one that can most efficiently discover, aggregate, and route the world's fragmented compute.

链捕手Hace 4 hora(s)

When Inference Becomes a Scarce Resource, Who Captures the Value?

链捕手Hace 4 hora(s)

Trading

Spot
Futuros

Artículos destacados

Cómo comprar ONE

¡Bienvenido a HTX.com! Hemos hecho que comprar Harmony (ONE) sea simple y conveniente. Sigue nuestra guía paso a paso para iniciar tu viaje de criptos.Paso 1: crea tu cuenta HTXUtiliza tu correo electrónico o número de teléfono para registrarte y obtener una cuenta gratuita en HTX. Experimenta un proceso de registro sin complicaciones y desbloquea todas las funciones.Obtener mi cuentaPaso 2: ve a Comprar cripto y elige tu método de pagoTarjeta de crédito/débito: usa tu Visa o Mastercard para comprar Harmony (ONE) al instante.Saldo: utiliza fondos del saldo de tu cuenta HTX para tradear sin problemas.Terceros: hemos agregado métodos de pago populares como Google Pay y Apple Pay para mejorar la comodidad.P2P: tradear directamente con otros usuarios en HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): ofrecemos servicios personalizados y tipos de cambio competitivos para los traders.Paso 3: guarda tu Harmony (ONE)Después de comprar tu Harmony (ONE), guárdalo en tu cuenta HTX. Alternativamente, puedes enviarlo a otro lugar mediante transferencia blockchain o utilizarlo para tradear otras criptomonedas.Paso 4: tradear Harmony (ONE)Tradear fácilmente con Harmony (ONE) en HTX's mercado spot. Simplemente accede a tu cuenta, selecciona tu par de trading, ejecuta tus trades y monitorea en tiempo real. Ofrecemos una experiencia fácil de usar tanto para principiantes como para traders experimentados.

282 Vistas totalesPublicado en 2024.12.12Actualizado en 2026.06.02

Cómo comprar ONE

Discusiones

Bienvenido a la comunidad de HTX. Aquí puedes mantenerte informado sobre los últimos desarrollos de la plataforma y acceder a análisis profesionales del mercado. A continuación se presentan las opiniones de los usuarios sobre el precio de ONE (ONE).

活动图片