This document is published monthly. It now provides information and comparison of Coinchange yield against different comparable indexes of yield in the market. We selected the components within the indexes to be direct, indirect or closely related to yield generation (DeFi and CeFi) and interest generation while maintaining strict requirements on funds availability (same day), small to no investment minimums and minimum liquidity requirement of $300k TVL for stablecoin assets like USDC, USDT, DAI, BUSD, MAI, stETH, DSR.
We also provide a historical comparison of the rate across the indexes to provide some perspective on performance over time.
For the month of July, Coinchange is still at the top in terms of yield being tracked with an impressive 5 consecutive months above 7% APR. CeFi Yield index has been in a steady uptrend since March at 6.87% and has now reached 8%. The DeFi Minimum Risk Rate has noted a sharp increase for July reaching 2.9% from June at 2%
Coinchange rate remains multiples higher than the CeDeFi index which track our competitors while not having any lockups, minimum investments requirements, being fully liquid and soon offering a non-custodial product. It is now at the same rate of April 2022 (4.58%) at 4.43%, meaning it took the index 10 months of uptrend to reach rate which are now 15 months old. The DeFi lending index has almost not moved since April with currently 2.99% compared to 2.67% then. The CeFi Yield Index baseline of 7% APR can be thought of as an indicator that institutional demand is still present and growing. We cover institutional adoption in our latest DeFi research news for July.
In July the United States experienced stagnant liquidity, with expensive equities despite sluggish economic indicators. The dollar index had been declining since late 2022. Regulatory updates included Kraken being ordered to share user information with the IRS, and the ongoing Ripple vs. SEC legal battle, which found XRP to be a security for institutional sales but not for the public.
Senators Lummis and Gillibrand introduced a crypto bill granting regulatory powers to the CFTC and imposing rules on stablecoin issuers and crypto exchanges. In the DeFi space, a hacker was charged with exploiting a smart contract, and the CFTC discussed DeFi regulation.
If you want to learn more, we cover other subjects in our latest DeFi Research News - July.
For July, we added a new index: DeFi Risk Free rate composed of ETH PoS yield for top providers and the DAI Saving Rate. We stopped tracking Spool Finance since none of the pools matched the CeDeFi Yield index requirements. For the DeFi yield index we removed one pool in BeeFy Finance since it failed passing requirements, Autofarm has been removed entirely for the same reasons. We added one pool to Clearpool under the CeFi yield index.
The chart below provides a snapshot of the rate across indexes and standalone rate for the month of July. We then describe the component within each index and standalone rate via a legend. The rate calculation methodology is the monthly average over the time period (July 1-31) for USDC, USDT, DAI and other comparable stablecoins. The exceptions are the DeFi Minimum Risk Rate which uses a 30 day average TVL weighted stablecoin 30 day average lending rate, and Coinchange which uses a weighted average rate (explained in its dedicated section).
We organize the indexes into 3 categories of risk.
Comment on the index: No comment
Below is the historical performance of the indexes mentioned above since January 2022.
Comment on the index: no comment
Comment on the index: no changes made to strategies compared to April.
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Below is the historical performance of the indexes mentioned above since January 2022.
Comment on the index: Spool finance has been removed since it did not pass requirements.
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Autofarm has been removed while one pool has been removed from Beefy since they did not meet requirements.
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Below is the historical performance of the indexes mentioned above since January 2022.
DeFi related indexes (DeFi MRR, DeFi lending, DeFi Yield) had their rates decrease during Q1 2022 and stabilized in Q2 2022. DeFi Yield index, on the medium to high risk end, stabilized at the end of Q3 2022 while having a short lived uptick in July. Q4 2022 saw all DeFi related indexes move in a general uptrend.
Regarding CeFi related indexes (CeDeFi Yield, CeFi yield, Coinchange) they followed the same pattern in general as the DeFi related yield indexes except for Coinchange which saw its rate increase up until Q1 2022. CeFi related yield indexes rate decreased in Q2 2022 and stabilized in Q3 2022 for CeDeFi Yield index while Coinchange and CeFi yield index saw a significant uptick. In Q4 2022 all CeFi related yield index moved in a general uptrend while remaining higher than beginning of Q3 but lower than end of Q3 rates.
In the beginning of this Q3 2023 we saw a general uptrend of all indexes rate with Coinchange being the only one readjusting downward reaching 6.99% in July. This is due to redeployment of some strategies but overall the increased volatility in the market benefitted DEX based and MMP based strategies deployed by Coinchange. The strategies have been performing very well by maintaining APR above 7% for close to 5 consecutive months. We further explore our strategies diversification and allocation across protocol types in our Asset Allocation Report - July.
CeFi Yield index remains close to its rate from Q4 2022, partly because Nexo rate remains at 8% since October despite all troubles around their competitions and themselves while the other component of the index are close to 8%. It either shows continued borrowing appetite by hedge funds and traders supporting a well built model or unsustainable rates that can soon turn into defaults (i.e TrueFi and Maple borrower defaults).
CeDeFi yield index has many components that suffered from the USDC depegging event in March but most recovered in the beginning of May and now suffer from retail client liquidity drying up. In May it finally decoupled from the DeFi Lending Index and the DeFi Minimum Risk Rate, which has not happened since Sept 2022. DeFi yield is continuing its downtrend and is now very close to CeDeFi yield and the Risk-Free rate.
The chart below represents the comparison of historical rates across indexes since January 2022 and aims to provide some perspective on performance over time. For full historical performance of Coinchange Earn Account check here.
A benchmark is a standard against which something is compared. In finance, investors use benchmarks to measure the performance of securities, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, portfolios, or other investment instruments.
Generally, broad market, market-segment stock and bond indexes are used for this purpose. If there is an investment instrument, there is a benchmark to compare it to, otherwise comparison across investment products alone does not provide the full picture.
In crypto, benchmarks do exist as well. The most common are the top 10 or 15 cryptocurrency indexes by market capitalization. DeFi benchmarks exist as well in the form of indexes, most of the time tracking the market capitalization of top DeFi governance token, which can be found for DeFi sub-segments such as DeFi yield, Oracle, GameFi, NFT marketplace, etc.
The benchmark we are seeking here, is one that could serve the same purpose as the “risk-free rate” that exists in traditional finance. In theory, the risk-free rate is the minimum return an investor expects for any investment while not accepting additional risk unless the potential rate of return is greater than the risk-free rate. Determination of a proxy for the risk-free rate of return will depend mainly on the credibility, liquidity size of the product, and availability. In practice, although a completely risk-free rate does not exist, the interest rate on a 10 year U.S. bond is often used as the benchmark for most investors while foreign investors might need to factor in the currency risk.
In DeFi we can’t name such a benchmark “risk-free rate” since the technology it is built on is rather new and hence does not carry the same credibility as US T-Bill. Hence using “DeFi minimum risk rate” is more suited. Like in the TradFi market, DeFi has large investors seeking low risk returns in non-derivative markets which have high levels of liquidity with full redemption intraday. Protocols that fit the requirement are lending and borrowing protocols as per Credmark research. We should only take into consideration the rate of return of stable assets as the risk-free rate in TradFi is denominated in dollars.
Hence the minimal risk rate in DeFi could be determined by taking the TVL weighted average rate for USDC, USDT and DAI - as they are the most stable with highest liquidity - on AAVE and Compound - as they are the most secure and longest standing protocols in DeFi with highest Total Value Locked (TVL).
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