- The Decentralised
- Posts
- Downstream finance š
Downstream finance š
Stream Finance blew up last week, revealing the extent to which risk can accumulate in the DeFi ecosystem.
GM, Aleks here.
A week after stablecoin issuer Stream Finance lost $93 million, weāre getting a clearer picture of its ripple effect on the broader DeFi ecosystem ā and of a mounting legal battle.
One of the victims, a yield protocol called Trevee, published a post-mortem on November 7 explaining its own exposure to Stream.
Typically, these analyses explain a software flaw the team had overlooked, or a failure in operational security.
But Treveeās writeup has something to say about DeFi writ large, to wit: the cascading risk embedded in a concept at the core of decentralised finance, that protocols are āmoney legos.ā
Unlike traditional finance, where services are siloed, DeFi offers discrete, but interoperable tools that can be plugged into one another in order to create novel, lucrative financial products.
Hereās what happened to Trevee. The protocol helps users earn yield on their stablecoins and other crypto assets by depositing them in lending protocols such as Euler. It then issues yield-generating receipt tokens in exchange for those deposits.
Stream was one of Treveeās borrowers. So, when it lost the $93 million ā more on that in a moment ā Treveeās receipt tokens lost some of their backing.
Stream borrowed far and wide; all told, it had borrowed $283 million to mint its xUSD synthetic dollar, according to Treveeās own estimate. Treveeās own exposure was $14 million.
Trevee said it would shut down its rehypothecation feature and hire lawyers to pursue any amounts it may be owed as Stream goes through an expected bankruptcy process.
The Trevee team said it was also coordinating with other creditors to āensure a unified front against Stream,ā the post-mortem read.
Trevee wasnāt the only protocol affected. In addition to some relatively obscure protocols, DeFi stalwarts Compound, Euler, and Morpho had various levels of exposure to Stream, according to crypto risk manager Chaos Labs.
Stream said it has retained lawyers from white-shoe law firm Perkins Coie to investigate what went wrong, but has been radio silent otherwise.
Diogenes Casares, a co-founder of Klyra ā the Buenos Aires-based company that built Stream ā also hinted at turmoil among his colleagues.
āOur soul [sic] goal right now is to manage this situation best we can to make users as whole as possible,ā he wrote on X. āThis is why we transferred funds out of @0xlawlolās control a few days ago while he was still cooperating.ā
In another post, he said someone named āCalebā had sole control over funds and strategies at Stream. It wasnāt immediately clear whether 0xlawlol and Caleb are the same person ā Casares didnāt respond when I contacted him on Monday.
This gets at another persistent problem in the crypto space. While pseudonymity has its benefits, it makes it difficult to know who exactly youāre doing business with.
In theory, DeFi provides sufficient transparency to monitor risk and leverage in real time. But the money legos make it nigh impossible for an average user to find cracks in the foundation.
For instance, whereās Stream Financeās $93 million?
Top DeFi stories of the week š¤
Latest from DL Research
This week in DeFi governance āļø
PROPOSAL: Uniswap DAO considers UNI fee switch
Post of the week š„
Shameless plug: DL Newsā sister company DefiLlama just launched its own LLM, which can provide analysis of real-time DeFi data. Folks seem to like it!
Got a tip about DeFi? Reach out at [email protected]
DL News is an independent news organisation that provides original, in-depth reporting on the largely misunderstood world of cryptocurrency and decentralised finance. From original stories to investigations, our journalism is accurate, honest and responsible.
Forwarded by a friend? Subscribe here.











