The $90 Billion On-Chain Lending Market: Why Haven't Institutions Entered Yet?

marsbitОпубликовано 2026-03-16Обновлено 2026-03-16

Введение

Despite reaching a historic high of $90 billion in Q4 2025, institutional capital accounts for only 11.5% of the total value locked in DeFi lending. While regulatory barriers are gradually being addressed, the primary obstacles to institutional adoption are the lack of risk isolation infrastructure, fixed-rate instruments, and compliance-integrated tools. Key innovations are emerging to bridge this gap: Aave V4 introduces a hub-and-spoke model for shared liquidity with isolated risk parameters; Morpho enables delegated risk curation through professional managers; Pendle splits yield assets into fixed and variable components to offer predictable returns; and Maple Finance diversifies yield sources and plans to introduce structured, tranched credit products. These developments are rebuilding traditional finance risk primitives—such as risk separation, curation, and fixed rates—in a programmable, transparent, and composable on-chain format. The evolution of this infrastructure is critical to attracting the next wave of institutional capital into DeFi lending.

Author: Nishil Jain

Compiled by: Deep Tide TechFlow

Deep Tide Guide: DeFi on-chain lending hit a historic high of $90 billion in Q4 2025, yet institutional capital accounts for only 11.5% of TVL—this contrast highlights the core of this article. Regulatory barriers are gradually dissolving (GENIUS Act passed, SEC dropped multiple investigations), but what truly holds institutions back is the lack of risk isolation infrastructure: no fixed rates, no risk tranching, no tools that can be embedded into internal compliance frameworks. The author systematically explains how Aave V4, Morpho's curator model, Pendle's yield splitting, and Maple's structured credit are each filling this gap, presenting one of the most comprehensive roadmaps for the institutionalization of DeFi.

Full Text Below:

According to DeFiLlama data, crypto-collateralized lending reached a historic high of $90 billion in Q4 2025. On-chain lending currently accounts for about two-thirds of this, compared to less than half at the peak in 2021. On the other hand, the private credit market's capitalization has more than doubled over the past year, growing from $10 billion in February 2025 to $25 billion today.

DeFi has grown into a credible credit market, but institutional capital from asset management firms, pension funds, endowments, and sovereign wealth funds accounts for only 11.5% of DeFi's total value locked (TVL).

The gap between the maturity of DeFi infrastructure and the rate of institutional adoption is the core structural tension of this cycle.

In a previous article, we explored how DeFi's vault ecosystem can achieve scale through open, verifiable infrastructure—blockchain's trust layer replaces the manual verification costs that make traditional asset management difficult to unbundle. It is this same attribute that makes the next evolution possible.

When risk parameters, curator actions, and liquidation logic are all on-chain and auditable, it becomes possible to build a set of risk management infrastructure that would be too opaque or costly to coordinate in traditional finance.

Curated vaults are the first embodiment of this thinking. However, institutions need more than curation—they need risk isolation across markets, fixed-rate instruments, and structured credit. This article delves into the broader risk tech stack currently emerging in DeFi.

Sygnum Bank, one of the regulated digital asset banks, issued a blunt assessment in mid-2025: despite DeFi protocols functioning, permissioned pools existing, KYC frameworks being online, and tokenized real-world assets being operational—in their view, no major institutional decision-maker will allocate capital to crypto assets until legal enforceability and regulatory risks are fully resolved.

Sygnum added that almost all inflows still come from asset managers, hedge funds, or crypto-native institutions with higher risk tolerance. KYC-gated vaults and permissioned lending pools, often presented as institutional breakthroughs, have not attracted meaningful institutional inflows.

The demand for DeFi exposure is real. A survey of 352 institutional investors conducted by EY-Parthenon and Coinbase in January 2025 showed that 83% of respondents plan to increase their crypto allocation, with 59% intending to put more than 5% of AUM into it. However, currently only 24% of institutions actually participate in DeFi.

These concerns are justified. When asked about reasons for not participating in DeFi, regulatory uncertainty ranked first at 57%. This is a real obstacle—but one that is being actively dismantled. The GENIUS Act has passed, MiCA is being fully enforced in Europe, and the SEC closed investigations into protocols like Aave, Uniswap, and Ondo without taking enforcement action.

The other obstacles revealed by the survey are more telling: compliance risk ranked second at 55%, followed by insufficient internal expertise at 51%. These issues are not about whether DeFi is legal, but about whether institutions can operationalize DeFi exposure within their existing risk frameworks. Can compliance teams map a lending position to an internal mandate? Can risk officers isolate exposure to specific collateral types? Can portfolio managers delegate capital allocation to professional curators within defined parameters?

In most of today's DeFi, the answer is still no. However, on-chain risk dynamics are changing.

The Missing Layer

The reason for this is rooted in the structure of the crypto industry. According to Fidelity research, institutional investors allocate about 41% of their portfolios to fixed income. Insurance companies, pension funds, and endowments do this not out of a lack of risk appetite—but because their mandates require predictable cash flows to match long-term liabilities.

The infrastructure that makes this possible—interest rate swaps alone have $469 trillion in notional outstanding, per BIS data—fundamentally relies on a basic primitive: risk separation—splitting exposure into fixed and floating parts, allowing different participants to get what they need.

DeFi's first cycle omitted these risk separation primitives. The design philosophy from 2020 to 2021 focused on shared liquidity pools, uniform risk parameters, governance-voted collateral, and variable rates.

Every depositor bore equal exposure.

For crypto-native capital—hedge funds running basis trades, yield farmers chasing incentives—this model worked. DeFi lending grew from hundreds of millions to tens of billions of dollars. But this architecture set a ceiling. When there is no mechanism to separate risk, no way to isolate exposure to specific collateral types, and no way to delegate risk decisions to professional curators, there is almost no entry path for the capital managing over $130 trillion in global fixed income.

The Shift Happening

A structural shift is underway in several major protocols.

Their common thread is the introduction of risk management tools that allow institutions to tailor the experience to their compliance and risk preferences.

Risk Isolation

In Aave V3, each lending market is an independent pool—with its own liquidity, its own assets, and its own risk parameters. Creating a new market for a different risk tier requires building liquidity from scratch, which is costly and results in thin liquidity pools with higher rates.

Aave V4, currently running on public testnet with a mainnet launch target of early 2026, splits the system into two layers. A central Liquidity Hub holds all assets on each network, while user-facing Spokes define their own risk rules, collateral types, and access controls.

Spokes draw liquidity from the Hub instead of maintaining their own. In this new model, liquidity is shared, but risk is isolated. An RWA Spoke where institutions borrow stablecoins against tokenized treasuries can set separate LTV ratios, liquidation parameters, and access controls—completely independent from the Spoke next door running high-volatility crypto assets.

Both share the same deep stablecoin pool, but a liquidation cascade in one does not contaminate the other.

Aave's Horizon platform operates RWA markets in a similar permissioned manner, with net deposits exceeding $550 million, and Kulechov aims to reach $1 billion by 2026 through partnerships with Circle, Ripple, Franklin Templeton, and VanEck.

Delegated Risk Curation

Morpho may have paved the UX path for institutions to enter DeFi lending. Remember the institutional issue of "insufficient internal expertise"? Morpho vaults might be the solution. Its vault system separates liquidity provision from risk management by introducing professional curators—independent teams that define collateral policies, set exposure limits, and configure capital in lending markets on behalf of capital providers.

Over 30 curators currently operate on Morpho, with total deposits growing from $5 billion to $11 billion, and active loans reaching $4.5 billion.

Morpho offers an optimal balance between generating passive yield and managing risk, and institutions are starting to see its value.

In January 2026, Bitwise, a registered investment adviser managing over $15 billion in client assets, launched the first non-custodial vault on Morpho, with dedicated portfolio managers handling strategy and risk management.

Anchorage Digital, the first federally chartered digital asset bank in the US, now offers institutional clients direct access to Morpho vaults and custodies the resulting vault tokens.

Coinbase integrated Morpho to support its crypto-collateralized lending product, facilitating over $960 million in active loans. Societe Generale Forge, Gemini, and Crypto.com have established similar integrations.

Yield Predictability

One of the most fundamental mismatches between DeFi and institutional capital lies in the interest rate structure. DeFi lending rates are variable by default, fluctuating with pool utilization, sometimes dropping from double digits to single digits within days.

This is not feasible for pension funds or insurance companies that need to match predictable cash flows with long-term liabilities. You cannot promise a 7% return to beneficiaries if your yield source might drop 5% next month.

Pendle solves this by splitting yield-bearing assets into two tradable tokens: Principal Tokens (PT), representing the underlying asset redeemable at maturity; and Yield Tokens (YT), capturing all variable yield generated up to the maturity date.

This split mirrors traditional fixed-income instruments—PTs function like zero-coupon bonds, while YTs isolate the floating rate exposure for those looking to speculate on or hedge against interest rate movements.

Institutions buying PTs lock in a fixed return; traders buying YTs get leveraged exposure to variable yields. Both get what they need from the same underlying position.

Pendle settled $58 billion in fixed yield in 2025, a 161% year-over-year increase, generating over $40 million in annualized protocol revenue.

Its Boros platform, launched in early 2026, extends this logic to funding rate derivatives—allowing institutions to hedge or go long on perpetual contract funding rates, a market with over $150 billion in daily trading volume that previously had no on-chain hedging tools.

On-Chain Credit Diversification

Most DeFi lending protocols generate yield from only one source: over-collateralized crypto loans with variable rates. When markets cool, utilization drops, rates compress, and yields decline.

Maple Finance has been diversifying its return sources. Its core product offers fixed-rate, over-collateralized loans to institutional borrowers—trading firms, market makers—with transparency provided by on-chain, real-time visible collateral. It currently offers a 5.3% 30-day annualized yield.

Beyond this, it launched a BTC yield product in early 2025, generating returns denominated in Bitcoin; and a high-yield secured pool, which achieved a 9.2% yield in Q2 2025 through active credit underwriting.

Its syrupUSDC token—a liquid receipt for participation in lending pools—integrates with Aave, Morpho, Spark, and Pendle, allowing depositors to combine yields across protocols or lock in fixed rates via Pendle's yield tokenization. The result is a multi-strategy credit platform, not a single lending pool.

Maple's AUM grew from $516 million to $4.59 billion throughout 2025, outstanding loans increased eightfold, and Q4 annualized revenue reached $30 million.

CEO Sid Powell has signaled a move into structured credit—securitization and asset-backed products. In practice, this means acquiring a pool of on-chain loans and slicing them into tranches: senior tranches get paid first, with lower risk; junior tranches absorb losses first but get higher returns.

This is the very mechanism that scaled traditional credit markets from billions to trillions—it allows the same loan pool to be invested in by conservative pension funds and yield-seeking hedge funds simultaneously. These products are not yet live, but the direction signals diversifying on-chain credit products to cover all risk tiers.

The Pattern

The details of individual protocols are far less important than the structural pattern they reveal. DeFi is rebuilding TradFi's risk management primitives—risk isolation, curation, tranching, fixed rates, compliance gating—in a programmable, transparent, and composable form.

This distinction is crucial. Smart contracts are auditable, settlement is real-time, vault allocations are visible on-chain, curator actions are time-locked and observable.

All the opacity of traditional risk infrastructure becomes unnecessary. What is being introduced is a functional architecture—separation of concerns that allows different types of capital to coexist on shared infrastructure.

The vault ecosystem is the most visible place for this convergence. Bitwise's 2026 Outlook describes on-chain vaults as "ETF 2.0", predicting their AUM will double this year. Morpho sees its vaults as the savings account layer following the success of stablecoins as the checking account layer: stablecoins bring money on-chain, vaults put it to work.

As more institutions, fintechs, and neobanks embed vault-driven yield products into their offerings, end-users may not even be aware they are interacting with DeFi infrastructure.

The crypto-collateralized lending market is healthier than ever. Galaxy Research notes that the current leverage cycle is built on collateralized, transparent structures, replacing the opaque, uncollateralized credit that defined 2021.

However, breaking through the scale ceiling of crypto-native capital requires a risk layer aligned with institutional mandates. The protocols building this layer—through modular risk isolation, professional curation, fixed-rate infrastructure, and on-chain structured credit—are the ones positioned to capture the next order of magnitude of capital.

Whether they succeed will depend less on their TVL and more on whether institutions gradually come to trust that these on-chain risk controls are as reliable as the traditional ones they already operate within. That question remains open. But for the first time ever, the architecture needed to answer it exists.

Связанные с этим вопросы

QWhat is the core structural tension highlighted in the article regarding DeFi's growth and institutional adoption?

AThe gap between the maturity of DeFi infrastructure and the low institutional adoption rate, with institutional capital representing only 11.5% of DeFi's Total Value Locked (TVL).

QAccording to the Sygnum Bank assessment, what is the primary reason major institutional allocators are hesitant to deploy capital into crypto assets?

AThe lack of legal enforceability and unresolved regulatory risks, which they believe must be fully addressed before any major institutional deployment occurs.

QWhat fundamental primitive from traditional finance (TradFi) is identified as missing in early DeFi lending models, preventing the entry of large fixed-income capital?

ARisk separation, specifically the ability to split exposure into fixed and floating components, allowing different participants to access the risks and returns that suit their mandates.

QName three key infrastructure improvements or protocols mentioned that are building the necessary risk layer for institutional adoption.

AAave V4's hub-and-spoke model for risk isolation, Morpho's curator model for delegated risk management, and Pendle's yield-tokenization for fixed-rate, predictable yield.

QWhat does the article suggest is the ultimate test for whether the new wave of DeFi risk infrastructure will succeed in attracting institutional capital?

AWhether institutions come to believe that these on-chain risk controls are as reliable and robust as the traditional risk management frameworks they already operate within.

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