At the beginning of 2026, several major financial platforms signaled the same structural shift: asset management is moving on-chain.
Bitwise launched a non-custodial stablecoin vault on Ethereum, targeting returns of up to 6%. Kraken expanded its DeFi Earn products and offered returns as high as 8% via the vault infrastructure. Fidelity began hiring product leaders specifically focused on tokenized funds and programmable investment strategies.
Individually, these movements appear incremental. Collectively, they point to something bigger: Programmable vaults are beginning to reshape parts of traditional fund infrastructure, particularly in the areas of return generation, treasury management, and digital asset allocation.
Instead of relying on custodians, managers and manual portfolio operations, vaults autonomously execute investment strategies in code. They provide real-time transparency, lower operational overhead and continuous revenue generation, transforming complex strategies into accessible digital products.
What started as a crypto-native experiment is increasingly integrated into institutional workflows.
What are on-chain programmable safes?
Programmable vaults are smart contracts that pool user deposits and automatically deploy capital into return-generating strategies.
Here is the basic mechanism:
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Users deposit assets (e.g. USDC)
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The vault distributes money across credit markets, liquidity platforms, or tokenized assets
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The return is built up automatically
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Users can generally withdraw at any time, depending on available liquidity and strategic constraints
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In return, users receive tokenized vault shares that represent proportional ownership
Most modern safe shares are built on the ERC-4626 standardthat standardizes deposit and withdrawal mechanisms and improves composition between wallets, aggregators and exchanges.
Unlike traditional funds:
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Assets are not held in escrow
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Positions are visible in real time in the chain
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The execution is automated via smart contracts
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Settlement is usually faster than with traditional fund structures
For example, a $100,000 USDC deposit in a managed vault can be programmatically allocated to multiple credit markets, generating ongoing returns without manual management.
Vaults transform strategy execution into programmable infrastructure.
Why 2026 could be a turning point
Several forces are accelerating adoption.
1. Institutional integration is expanding
Major platforms are integrating vault infrastructure into their product stacks.
Kraken’s DeFi Earn leverages vault infrastructure to deliver automated return strategies. Coinbase has integrated Morpho in its credit stack, with billions in collateral and significant stablecoin balances delivering returns through vault-based mechanisms. The launch of Bitwise’s vault represents one of the first institutional asset managers to offer a fully non-custodial on-chain returns strategy.
Meanwhile, companies like Fidelity are building internal capabilities around tokenized investment products.
The shift is no longer theoretical, but operational.
2. Infrastructure has reached multi-billion dollar scales
Vault protocols now work at meaningful scale.
Morpho’s lending infrastructure grew rapidly in 2025, reaching well into the multi-billion dollar range of total deposits. Tokenized Treasury platforms such as Ondo Finance report approximately $2.5 billion in tokenized government securities products. Vault infrastructure providers collectively manage billions in stablecoin and digital asset strategies.
This scale makes vaults increasingly relevant for institutional allocators, exchanges and treasury managers.
3. Stablecoin growth drives demand
Global stablecoin supply has exceeded $300 billion, creating significant amounts of unused digital dollars.
Vaults provide a programmable way to deploy these balances in credit markets, government bond-backed products and other yield strategies. Depending on market conditions and risk profiles, vault returns often range from mid-single digits to high single digits.
Although returns fluctuate and risks differ from traditional money market funds, vault-based strategies are becoming increasingly competitive as an alternative to cash management for digital asset holders.
How vaults compare to traditional funds
Programmable vaults replicate but automate certain operational functions of traditional funds.
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Periodic reporting |
Real-time transparency |
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Custodians hold assets |
Non-custodial smart contracts |
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Manual wallet execution |
Automated assignment logic |
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Redemption windows |
Generally faster withdrawals (liquidity dependent) |
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Operational layers (administrators, transfer agents) |
Reduced operational overhead |
The efficiency gain comes from automation. Smart contracts reduce dependence on intermediaries and enable continuous execution.
However, distribution channels, regulations and investor protection still resemble traditional financing in many cases. Vaults often handle strategy execution, while institutions provide layers of packaging and compliance.
Rather than replacing funds entirely, vaults are restructuring the way fund strategies are built and delivered.
Producing complex investment strategies
One of the most important breakthroughs is simplification.
Vaults package advanced strategies into one-deposit experiences. These may include:
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Optimization of lending via multiple protocols
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Exposure to government bond backed returns
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Institutional private credit
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Risk-insulated credit markets
Users deposit capital; the strategy is executed automatically within predefined parameters.
For this reason, safes are sometimes described as “ETFs for DeFi.” The comparison reflects simplicity, although safes differ in structure, regulation and risk profile.
The complexity of the strategy is abstracted away. Implementation becomes infrastructure.
Risks and structural challenges
Safes provide efficiency improvements, but not without risk.
Smart contract risk
Code vulnerabilities can lead to losses, as seen in previous DeFi exploits.
Oracle Risk
Erroneous or manipulated price feeds can affect allocation logic and liquidations.
Liquidity risk
Withdrawals are subject to available liquidity in the underlying markets. During stressful conditions, slippage or delays may occur.
Real asset counterparty risk (RWA).
Treasury-backed and private credit vaults rely on third-party custodians, legal entities and issuers.
Governance and trustee risk
Many vaults rely on professional curators who define risk parameters and allocation logic. Management decisions and parameter changes can materially affect the outcomes.
Security practices have been significantly improved, including audits, isolated risk parameters and professional oversight. But programmable infrastructure does not eliminate market or operational risk; it gives it a new shape.
How to evaluate a safe deposit box before making a deposit
For investors considering vault strategies, due diligence is critical.
1. Strategy transparency
What protocols are used? Is there leverage? How diversified is the exposure?
2. Audit and security history
Has the contract been checked? Are reports public? Is there an active bug bounty?
3. Liquidity profile
Are withdrawals instant? Is there a queuing mechanism? How has the safe performed during past volatility?
4. Risk concentration
Is capital spread across multiple markets or concentrated in one protocol?
5. Management and curatorial structure
Who controls the parameters? How are changes implemented? What incentives connect trustees to depositors?
6. Regulatory structure (for risk-weighted assets)
Who legally owns the underlying assets? Which jurisdiction governs the structure?
Vaults automate execution, but capital allocation decisions still require judgment.
Conclusion: The future of asset management is becoming programmable
Programmable safes are changing the way return strategies are constructed and delivered.
They automate operational processes traditionally handled by fund managers, while providing:
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Real-time transparency
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Reduced operational overhead
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Continuous, programmable revenue generation
In 2026, safes will no longer be niche instruments. They are emerging as fundamental infrastructure for on-chain asset management – particularly for stablecoin returns, lending optimization and tokenized real-world assets.
The question is not whether the vault infrastructure will grow.
It is the speed at which traditional fund managers, regulators and institutional allocators are adapting to the programmable financial architecture.

