Polychain And Arca Propose A Yield Cut For The Anchor Protocol
Polychain Capital and Arca, two crypto investment firms, are proposing yield cutbacks to the Anchor Protocol, the Terra blockchain ecosystem’s largest decentralized finance (DeFi) lending protocol, in a vote this week.
Anchor Protocol promises a 19.5 percent yield and has amassed a total value locked (TVL) of $12.7 billion, a growth rate that some analysts and dealers believe is unsustainable. According to data from DeFi Llama, Anchor is the largest DeFi protocol by TVL in the Terra ecosystem and the fourth-largest DeFi protocol across all blockchains.
For users that deposit more than 100,000 of Terra’s dollar-linked stablecoin UST into the protocol, the proposed yield cutbacks will reduce Anchor’s payout by between 2 and 9.5 percentage points in yearly yield.
“After successfully bootstrapping UST adoption with a 20% Anchor Rate, it’s time to focus on protocol sustainability by bringing down the overall yield earned by depositors and maintaining high yields for small-and-medium sized users,” the proposal stated.
Deposit Amount | Proposed APY |
---|---|
Up to 100,000 UST | 19.56% [No change] |
Above 100,000 and up to 500,000 UST | 17.5% |
Above 500,000 UST | 10.0% |
TIERED PAYOUTS: For a depositor of 1,000,000 UST, the first 100,000 is subject to 19.56% APY, the next 400,000 UST will be subject to 17.50% APY, and the remaining 500,000 UST would earn 10.00% APY.
Polychain and Arca, which both have capital locked up in Anchor, also proposed downward rate revisions every 30 days for deposit amounts in the two higher tiers, which would be implemented over one and a half years beginning on April 1.
The proposal, introduced in Anchor’s governance forum on Feb. 25, officially went live for voting on Thursday.
Despite the fact that voting on the plan is still ongoing (voting closes next Wednesday AM), it looks that the initiative’s chances of passing are limited.
As of press time, over 70% of Anchor token holders had voted, with 55% voting “No” and 16% voting “Yes.”
Terra’s development is being anchored.
Stablecoin farming has drawn big swaths of crypto investors hoping for high rewards with lesser market risk amid the market sell-off. Unlike yield farming with riskier cryptocurrencies, keeping the underlying stablecoins has almost no volatility.
The proposal comes as critics of Anchor say its high yield will become unsustainable and is threatening the long-term viability of the protocol and the larger Terra ecosystem.
Anchor presently offers a 19.57 percent annual percentage yield (APY) on UST stablecoin deposits, which are paid out in its native ANC token.
This value is significantly greater than similar DeFi projects. Curve, a popular decentralized stablecoin exchange, for example, is paying an APY of 4.7 percent to 11.8 percent on deposits in its UST pool.
Anchor has also sparked a frenzy of interest in UST stablecoins among yield-hungry investors, driving UST’s sister token LUNA to new all-time highs, despite the fact that other layer-1 tokens have been massively sold off. This month has also seen a significant price increase in Anchor’s native ANC cryptocurrency.
Anchor’s current borrow rate for UST now sits at 12.7%, a figure lower than the 19.5% yield Anchor is paying out to its depositors. Additionally, the amount of UST deposited far exceeds the amount of UST being loaned out.
The community debates
The proposal has drawn intense discussion from the DeFi community, igniting debates ranging from potential loopholes to whether changes to Anchor’s existing code base proposed by third parties constitute a valid governance proposal.
Many respondents in the proposal’s governance thread highlighted concerns regarding a potential Sybil attack. Such an attack occurs if Anchor users with large amounts of UST create multiple wallets below the 100,000 UST threshold to continue to collect the higher yield.
In response to those critics, Polychain research strategist Josh Rosenthal responded
“We are taking a calculated bet in assuming that this wallet gamesmanship will take place on the margins, but not at a magnitude that will render this proposal ineffective on the whole.”
Another concern highlighted by Gabriel Shapiro (“@lex_node”), general counsel at Delphi Labs, centered around the lack of clear direction regarding the proposal’s implementation.
Shapiro called the proposal “intrinsically meaningless” and “impossible to evaluate,” pointing to the technical legwork required if the proposal were to pass.
Others took to Twitter to say that implementing the proposal would be a poor use of Anchor’s precious developer resources.
Kanav Kariya, president of Jump Crypto, also tweeted that Jump would vote “No.”
The proposal also touches upon a long-standing DeFi criticism, namely, that projects are quick to rake up TVL by paying out an unsustainable yield.
Eventually, the critics say, the flywheel will collapse, leading to a mass exodus of capital, token crashes and tears. (The term “Ponzinomics” is now a staple of the crypto vernacular.)
It appears DeFi “degens” will have to choose between higher short-term gains or longer-term sustainability of the protocol.
While Terra co-founder Do Kwon has remained silent on which side he supports, Anchor Protocol’s official Twitter account retweeted a post from a Twitter user voicing objections to the proposal.
Even if the proposal fails, it appears that the effort is at least igniting much-needed discussion over the sustainability of Anchor, with some dissenters objecting to the proposal in its practice, but not in its spirit.
“We should welcome new brains thinking about Anchor’s future and participating in its governance,” Kwon tweeted.
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