wumpy crypto

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wumpy crypto

wumpy crypto

@wumpycrypto

head of defi @3janexyz

Bergabung Mart 2023
414 Mengikuti511 Pengikut
wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
@Tiza4ThePeople still think theres a lot of money to be made, less so in pure yield farming but asymmetric opportunites are ever present i miss the days of looping pt-usde for 60%+ apy though
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Santisa 🔜 DAS🗽
Santisa 🔜 DAS🗽@Tiza4ThePeople·
Current yield environment is pretty bad. We'll find out in the coming months which managers are level-headed, and which are farming their LPs by going into poorly risk-adjusted opps to squeeze an extra few bucks. To the honest ones: see you on the next bull run.
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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
or underwrite against stocks held in brokerage accounts and issue on-chain loans based on their total portfolio effectively bringing one of the main use cases (borrowing) for tokenized stocks on-chain while they retain holder equity
nairolf@0xNairolf

i dont understand why more people dont talk about DeFi on tokenized stocks 500m people already own stocks thats 500m people who could get: - loans against them - yield on them isnt it like an obvious massive market or im i retarded?

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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
oracles are one of the main weak points in defi money markets even an oracle safeguard introduces vulnerabilities issuing loans based on credit risk rather than liquidation risk reduces oracle dependency no wrongful liquidations, only margin calls when portfolio value drops
YAM 🌱@yieldsandmore

x.com/i/article/2031…

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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
@0xNairolf @3janexyz captures onchain and offchain assets/behaviors into its underwriting algorithm and has a backbone of legal recourse in case of default abstracts the hard parts away for the user (underwriting and recourse) letting them just lend w visibility into borrower activity
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nairolf
nairolf@0xNairolf·
what if: 1. build a primitive that captures contextual reputation (onchain + offchain) 2. let lenders fund borrowers peer to peer based on that reputation did we just unlock undercollateralized lending?
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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
defi will eventually be the terminal medium for private credit it has so many structural advantages over tradfi that make it significantly easier to issue loans programmatic tranching/risk transfer - tranching in defi is widely taken for granted. no one is raving about resolv's rlp, or 3jane's susd3 / usd3. on-chain tranching easily sets a clear capital waterfall through smart contracts. compare this with tradfi where tranching has tons of upfront fixed costs to set up entities and legal requirements necessary for tranching. in defi, any asset at any size can be tranched using smart contracts. in tradfi, fixed costs and ongoing operating expenses limit the universe of tranchable assets. while tranching is the main form of risk transfer i see occuring, other novel forms of on-chain risk transfers may gain adoption. continuous capital formation - raising funds for private credit deals typically is episodic and slow. deals must undergo rounds of pitches to find private credit funds / banks willing to loan out money. this creates a major time lag. compare this to defi which can offer continuous capital formation as deals originate and mature - constantly adapting to capital needs instead of being constrained to subscription/withdrawal periods. tokenization composability - tokenizing private credit deals can offer two huge advantages over tradfi: a) each individual can decide their leverage on a per-position basis b) secondary markets can help offer instant exit liquidity i think a) is one of the biggest upsides defi has. in tradfi, leverage either occurs at a fund level or requires other financing structures that increase overhead expenses. defi offers per-position leveraging - allowing for greater flexibility and capital growth.
Stani.eth@StaniKulechov

Private credit is in a strange place today. The economy is tied to the cost of money. Low interest rates mean cheap borrowing, which in theory should lead to higher utilization of credit facilities. Conversely, high interest rates mean less affordable borrowing and, in theory, reduced demand for credit. We've been living through a high-interest-rate environment since the Federal Reserve began its aggressive tightening cycle in March 2022, raising rates from near zero to over 5% by mid-2023, the fastest hiking cycle in four decades. Rates have remained elevated through early 2026, with only modest cuts. For many consumers and businesses that initiated borrowing during the low- or mid-rate era, and whose obligations remain outstanding, this translates into a significantly higher cost of capital, a burden that compounds over time. This all sounds normal. Finance is part of almost every phase of a company's lifecycle, from growth to maturity. The problem arises when the cost of capital stays elevated for too long, creating unmanageable expenses for borrowers. Businesses typically borrow from financial institutions like banks, or from asset managers in the form of private credit. How do private credit funds work? Private credit funds are typically either closed-end or semi-liquid vehicles managed by asset managers. This structure makes sense: the funds need to deploy capital into lending opportunities to generate returns. Investors in private credit range from pension funds, insurance companies, and family offices to, increasingly, retail investors. Closed-end funds don't allow redemptions until maturity, usually 7 to 10 years. Semi-liquid funds offer quarterly redemption windows with limits. BDCs (Business Development Companies), which are publicly traded, provide liquidity via daily trading on exchanges. In essence, private credit funds function as private banks: they lend capital to businesses and collect interest. What does private credit fund? Typically, private credit finances leveraged buyouts for private equity, middle-market corporate loans for companies that lack access to public bond markets, certain asset-backed lending (such as aircraft, shipping, and consumer loans), and real estate credit. Private credit funds generally fill the funding gap that banks have vacated. This shift has been driven primarily by post-2008 regulation, particularly Basel III, which pushed banks out of riskier corporate lending. Today, private credit finances an estimated 80 to 90% of leveraged buyouts in the U.S. middle market. Who are the players? Apollo ~$460B AUM Blackstone ~$330B AUM Ares ~$280B AUM KKR ~$220B AUM Carlyle ~$190B AUM Blue Owl ~$170B AUM What's going on? Recently, distress has emerged across private credit. The persistent cost of capital driven by high interest rates remains a reality, and AI is reshaping perceptions of many software companies that private credit has funded, creating uncertainty about these borrowers' futures. The market has already begun repricing private credit: VanEck BDC Income ETF: ~15% decline over the past year Blue Owl Capital: ~50% decline over the past year, with ~30% of that during 2026 Apollo, Blackstone, Ares, KKR: shares down ~20% on private credit concerns The average BDC now trades at roughly a 20% discount to NAV while offering 10 to 11% yields, signaling that loan portfolios may be overvalued, defaults could rise, or liquidity risk is building. What makes this even more concerning is that historically, these funds traded at a premium. Some funds' monitored loan default metrics have risen to as high as 9%. Blackstone's flagship private credit fund, BCRED, is a notable example. BCRED recently limited its redemptions. The fund manages roughly $82B, and during Q1 2026, redemption requests reached $3.7B, approximately 8% of NAV. Blackstone injected $400M of its own capital to support liquidity. Technically, the fund was not gated, but it came very close. Meanwhile, BlackRock's HPS Corporate Lending Fund (HLEND), a $26B fund, received $1.2B in redemption requests, reaching the point where gating was necessary. Roughly $580M in requests could not be honored. Blue Owl's retail private credit vehicle experienced $2.9B in redemptions during Q4 2025, with redemption requests reaching 15% of NAV, largely driven by exposure to software lending. Can the market handle a private credit fund default? While total redemptions have been around $7B+ (5 to 10% of NAV) and public alternative managers are down 20 to 30%, the overall private credit market is still $1.8 to 2T in size. Even the largest funds top out at $20 to 80B, compared to the global bond market at $130T or banking assets at $180T. A single fund default would most likely not collapse the broader market or trigger the kind of contagion that amplifies crises. Large funds also hold diversified portfolios of hundreds of loans, and the semi-liquid or closed-end structure naturally forces investor lock-up, acting as a buffer against bank-run dynamics. I've mapped out three scenarios of increasing severity: Scenario A: One large fund defaults (~$50B)Investors lose capital, some companies lose financing, and credit spreads widen. The system likely absorbs the shock. Scenario B: Several funds fail simultaneouslyCredit markets freeze, leveraged companies cannot refinance, and defaults cascade. This could trigger a credit-cycle downturn. Scenario C: Private credit + leveraged loans collapseA broader corporate credit crisis unfolds: private equity deals fail and banks become exposed. This would be genuinely systemic. Fortunately, private credit funds remain relatively small in the broader picture and are unlikely on their own to pose systemic risk. However, the most worrisome scenario is one where loss of confidence begins in private credit markets, particularly around lending to businesses vulnerable to AI disruption, and then bleeds into public bond markets. This contagion path is plausible because the larger corporates in bond markets are arguably more exposed to automation and AI disruption than the leaner, high-growth businesses that private credit typically funds. How does this affect RWAs and DeFi? The most immediate impact of private credit distress falls on capital allocators. Many private credit funds have been distributed to retail investors via publicly traded BDCs, private credit ETFs, or semi-liquid funds like Blackstone's BCRED, Apollo's Debt Solutions BDC, and BlackRock's HPS Corporate Lending Fund. These funds share common characteristics: quarterly (or monthly) redemption windows, redemption limits typically capped at 5% of NAV per quarter, and target returns of 8 to 11%. Recently, some funds have also begun gating redemptions. From a DeFi capital allocator's perspective, the biggest risk I see is structural: private credit is packaged in DeFi in ways that many retail-oriented users don't fully understand before committing capital. We've seen countless examples of DeFi users eagerly supplying funds into high-yielding RWA strategies, only to discover later that the underlying exposure carries significant duration risk. I believe RWAs represent the biggest opportunity for DeFi in the near term. However, my greatest fear is that institutional opportunists could view DeFi as a channel to offload illiquid and distressed products that Wall Street has already soured on, effectively using DeFi participants as exit liquidity. This risk is amplified by the fact that assessing RWA allocation opportunities is inherently harder: they don't carry the same transparency or onchain verifiability that native DeFi opportunities provide. That said, private credit done well onchain offers something traditional finance fundamentally cannot: smart contract-enforced guarantees. Redemption windows, withdrawal limits, collateral ratios, and distribution rules can be encoded immutably, meaning fund managers cannot arbitrarily change the terms after capital has been committed. In traditional private credit, investors discovered the hard way with BCRED and HLEND that redemption policies can be tightened or gated at the discretion of the manager when conditions deteriorate. Onchain, those rules are transparent from day one and enforced by code, not by a fund administrator under pressure. This is precisely where RWAs and DeFi can outperform the traditional model for this asset category. For RWAs to succeed in DeFi, and for DeFi to scale meaningfully through real-world assets, the industry needs deliberate and careful structuring of opportunities that bridge TradFi and onchain markets. That means robust transparency standards, proper risk disclosure, independent verification of underlying collateral, and governance frameworks that protect onchain participants from asymmetric information disadvantages. Without these safeguards, the convergence of TradFi and DeFi risks becoming extractive rather than additive. DeFi should not become Wall Street's exit liquidity.

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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
higher LTV = higher chance of accruing bad debt borrowers SHOULD pay a premium for this increased risk over @3janexyz, we offer variable interest rates on unsecured credit lines based on user's pull-to-value ratio
0xngmi@0xngmi

why has no lending market explored the idea of making the calculation of interest charged be dependent on the LTV of a loan the riskier a loan, the higher the interest the borrower pays afaik only protocol that has smth along these lines is Maker with ETH-A, ETH-B...

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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
5 out of 9 projects launched on metadao have undergone either buyback/liquidation proposals this is futarchy working. buyers have downside protection by buyback/liquidation proposals. this protection increases peoples willingness to fund early-stage startups however, the pressure shifts onto founders most teams raise pre-PMF, now they must ship fast, or face liquidation the only unfortunate thing is cryptonative people typically have a very short attention span. they expect returns and real revenue in an unreasonably short amount of time for startups with the current model, i imagine there will be a vast amount of projects funded with MOST undergoing liquidation by not finding PMF fast enough this leads to two outcomes: a) founders raise at later startup stages with real products b) top-tier founders may avoid raising on metadao under fear of their project being shut down i think that overall the metadao token design is a net-positive for the ecosystem. token holders retain real governance rights with fair token launches for founders, they're able to raise capital much easier due to the downside protection for buyers, but this also results in increased pressure to ship fast and provide tangible results
MetaDAO@MetaDAOProject

🚨New Decision Market🚨 A group of RNGR tokenholders allege that the @ranger_finance team made material misrepresentations about their business before the fundraise and are proposing liquidation. Read and trade the proposal below⏬

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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
rwas suffer from a duration mismatch during redemptions - decreasing their defi composability & requiring variable, expensive DEX liquidity but an on-chain revolving credit facility could underwrite an rwa to extend loans for redemptions - keeping the rwa completely liquid without depending on DEX liquidity
Silvio@SilvioBusonero

x.com/i/article/2001…

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wumpy crypto me-retweet
3Jane
3Jane@3janexyz·
1/ Since inception, 3Jane’s mission has been to enable a credit-based cryptoeconomy underwritten against future productivity. We’ve assembled a team across protocol engineering, credit risk, law, and game theory to turn it into a reality. Sharing the progress we’ve made.
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3lixbt (🗣️,🤝)
3lixbt (🗣️,🤝)@3liXBT·
Been keeping an eye on @3janexyz They're backed by Coinbase, Paradigm and wintermute Their sUSD3 farm earns 26.50% + points‼️ It's at the $50M cap right now though, so we need people to withdraw or the cap to be raised first
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NEO
NEO@Defi_Neo·
15% APY on stables. Yes, real stables. 👩‍🌾 This is USD3 on @pendle_fi 🩷 USD3 is over-collateralized, backed by a basket of yield generating positions across DAI, Morpho, Compound and Aave.💟 On Pendle, you split the yield… → YT is basically dead → PT locks you a ~15% fixed APY till expiry 27 days left. Boring is back and boring pays. 💸
NEO tweet media
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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
this market is a lose-lose for the @predictdotfun team market resolution states that the market will only resolve to YES if lighter launches a governance token in 2025 however, lighter launched $LIT and called it an infrastructure token with no mention of governance so either: resolve yes - change the criteria of the market for resolution and dissolve users trust resolve no - looks bad bc the team set up this market with a horrible resolution criteria THIS MARKET SHOULD RESOLVE TO NO, but i doubt this will be the case
wumpy crypto tweet media
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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
@yieldsandmore @ethena @Ethena_Eco poor execution of an airdrop wait until the last hour to announce reward distribution - then delay the actual reward distribution announcement another week THEN require users to lock up funds to claim i get trying to retain users, but this has to be -ev
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YAM 🌱
YAM 🌱@yieldsandmore·
Ethena S4 airdrop update: Users will be able to claim the 1% FDV portion of the S4 distribution on HyENA. In order to claim their airdrop, users with more than 200m of S4 rewards need to: - Deposit and hold HLPe or USDe on HyENA for a minimum 2 week period, within 2 months of HyENA launch. Users can fulfill this 2 week requirement at any stage over the 2 months, as long as the 2 week period is continuous. - Deposit requirement = 1 USDe per 2 million Ethena rewards in Season 4. For example, 1bn Rewards = 500 USDe. - In addition to the deposit, users just need to execute one trade of any size on HyENA. This is an unexpected change, especially since the S4 rewards distribution was already delayed (Season 4 ended on September 24, 2025). It does raise questions about what additional tasks might be required for future seasons. That being said, it’s completely understandable that @ethena is doing everything they can to retain users and try their new products, we just wish this had been announced upfront rather than after the season ended.
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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
500 followers 🥳🥳🥳 and my 2025 twitter wrapped @grok
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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
interesting activity on the kabuto $100 market btw @Frosen bought more shares of YES if frosen keeps buying YES on dips, it makes their attempt at price manipulation even more inevitable and may point to frosen having a decent idea of kabuto supply also the more YES shares frosen picks up, the more frosen can spend on buying cards while remaining profitable, thus making YES more likely
wumpy crypto tweet media
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto

x.com/i/article/1997…

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wumpy crypto
wumpy crypto@wumpycrypto·
3jane
Stephen | DeFi Dojo@phtevenstrong

Also, obviously, @pendle_fi. It's actually crazy that you can still get >15% fixed rate/date on Pendle even in these market conditions. GRANTED, all PTs are not equal. Some assets are way more risky / illiquid than others. So here's what I like (NFA, DYOR, GLHF): ➢ @3janexyz USD3: 19% IY Why? Senior tranche, fairly liquid, 51 days of yield. ➢ @Neutrl sNUSD: 18% IY Why? Accountable solvency proofs, great underlying APR, 86 Days ➢ @USDai_Official sUSDai: 16% IY Why? 600M TVL protocol, 99% TBILL backing, 100 days I also like @re's reUSD since it's a basis+tbill asset, as well as syzUSD because it's by @OuroborosCap8 and has a solvency dashboard. If I didn't mention one in the top 10, feel free to ask why.

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