A version of this article appeared in our The Decentralised newsletter on July 16. Sign up here.
GM, Tim here.
Here’s what caught my DeFi-eye recently:
- Why PayPal’s stablecoin supply grew $569 million over the past month.
- Polygon shifts from partnerships with Starbucks to degens.
- How a whitehat hacker helped recover $450 million.
PYUSD yields soar
PayPal is making another big push to promote its dollar-pegged stablecoin PYUSD.
It’s partnered with the Solana lending market, Kamino, to subsidise the yield on its PYUSD stablecoin and lure in DeFi users.
gmino$PYUSD incentives on Kamino Lend have been increased by 100%
— Kamino (@KaminoFinance) July 10, 2024
Depositors now earn 382.5K $PYUSD. Every. Single. Week. pic.twitter.com/IL7HZkeQij
Kamino users receive 17% annually on their PYUSD deposits. Yields on Circle’s USDC, the biggest stablecoin on Solana, sit at around 9%.
PayPal’s tactic is working. The amount of PYUSD in circulation swelled 96% over the past month to $569 million.
But the incentives can’t last forever. PayPal hopes that DeFi users will continue to use PYUSD even after the yields return to normal.
It’s not the first instance of PayPal using incentives to draw users to PYUSD.
In January, the payments provider started using so-called bribes to boost liquidity for PYUSD on the decentralised trading protocol Curve Finance.
Disclaimer: The two co-founders of DL News were previously core contributors to the Curve protocol.
Polygon courts degens
Polygon has decided to stop chasing big-name partnerships.
Instead, it wants to turn the network into a home for “somebody who wants to go into web3 protocols and have a bunch of fun, even if they lose money.”
In other words, degens.
Polygon CEO Marc Boiron and the network’s founders are architecting the change.
Polygon’s previous partnerships, which included Starbucks and online forum Reddit, were supposed to bring in users.
But that didn’t pan out.
“We were too early in assuming that they would create on-chain activity today,” Boiron said about the corporate brands.
Inside the war room
When a DeFi protocol gets hacked, it’s all hands on deck.
Behind closed doors, teams of crypto security experts form online war rooms — places to share information and find the best way to recover the stolen assets.
Ogle, a pseudonymous whitehat hacker, is a regular in such war rooms.
It’s his negotiation tactics that have helped recover $450 million from over 40 separate hacks.
“I’ve been around the block and dealt with very difficult people, dealt with big egos,” he told DL News in an interview.
Negotiating with hackers — no surprise — isn’t easy.
Chances are they have no interest in talking to representatives of the projects they just exploited. And even if they do engage, it can often be a waste of time.
When crypto exchange KyberSwap lost $48 million to an exploit in December, the hacker responded to negotiations by demanding control over the protocol, its founding company, and all its assets, in exchange for returning users’ funds.
Even so, Ogle said negotiating beats doing nothing, which is usually the harsh reality after a hack.
Data of the week
PayPal launched its PYUSD stablecoin on Solana on May 29.
Just over a month later, PYUSD on Solana accounts for over 32% of all PYUSD in circulation.
This week in DeFi governance
VOTE: GMX to create markets for memecoins PEPE, SHIB and WIF
VOTE: Arbitrum DAO to approve venture initiative pilot phase
VOTE: MakerDAO sends 219,125 DAI to Aave as part of the Spark revenue share agreement
Post of the week
After almost a month of selling, the German government has finally liquidated all 50,000 Bitcoin it seized from film piracy site Movie2k.to in January.
BREAKING: The German Government is now out of Bitcoin.
— Arkham (@ArkhamIntel) July 12, 2024
The German Government just sent 3846.05 BTC ($223.81M) to Flow Traders and 139Po (likely institutional deposit/OTC service).
The German Government has 0 BTC ($0.00M) remaining. pic.twitter.com/R2vfylR1b2
What we’re watching
So there's a pretty wild Crypto x AI story actively playing out right now.
— TylerD 🧙♂️ (@Tyler_Did_It) July 11, 2024
It involves a16z gp Marc Andreessen giving $50k in crypto to an AI agent.
Who has since plotted to use the funds to launch a shitcoin.
And is also an S-tier shitposter.
Let me back up.
Andy Ayrey… pic.twitter.com/TDCIuFREYe
Marc Andreessen gave an artificial intelligence agent $50,000 in Bitcoin.
Now, it wants to use the funds to launch a memecoin.
Got a tip about DeFi? Reach out at tim@dlnews.com.