The following is a guest post and analysis from Vincent Maliepaard, Marketing Director at Sentora.
Stablecoins have become a meaningful settlement layer, credit markets continue to grow and tokenized real world assets continue to grow. Visa said global stablecoin transaction volume will rise from more than $3.5 trillion in 2023 to more than $5.5 trillion in 2024. That’s not the profile of a niche experiment. It is the profile of infrastructure that finds the real demand.
The problem is that DeFi still measures itself with a bootstrap metric.
TVL is a misaligned scoreboard
For most of the last cycle, Total Value Locked became the default scoreboard. TVL was useful early on because it was simple. It showed that users were willing to move capital to the chain. It helped the market track adoption at a time when the main question was whether people would trust decentralized infrastructure at all. But once the goal shifts from growth to sustainability, TVL begins to hide as much as it reveals. It measures how much capital enters a protocol, not how well that capital is protected once it gets there.
That distinction is important because exposure is not the same as force.

A protocol can have hundreds of millions in deposits and still be structurally vulnerable. If these deposits come on top of weak dependencies, poor oracle design, concentrated governance, or limited safeguards, a high TVL does not make the system robust. It simply means more capital is exposed. In this sense, TVL is closer to a gross measure of activity than to a true measure of value. It tells you where the capital is. It doesn’t tell you whether that capital is safe.
The market has already seen what this looks like in practice.
When a major protocol is exploited, TVL can collapse almost immediately because the number never measured the capital defended in the first place. Ronin’s TVL fell from about $1.2 billion before the bridge operation in 2022 to about $15 million now, according to DeFiLlama data.

These are not edge cases. They show that deposits alone do not create trust and value. A large balance can disappear very quickly if the market realizes that the protection underneath is thin or non-existent.
This will become more important as DeFi moves closer to mainstream financial distribution.
Supporting DeFi’s next phase of growth
The next wave of adoption won’t come from turning every user into an expert on onchain risk. It will come from banks, fintechs, exchanges and consumer apps that package DeFi behind simpler products. The user experience can become simpler. One deposit. One balance. One yield number. But that simplicity doesn’t eliminate backend risk. It just hides it. If the underlying capital is still exposed to smart contract failures, oracle issues, and composability risks without clear protection, a cleaner interface does not make the product institution-ready. It only makes the risk less visible.
That’s why DeFi needs a second benchmark: Total value covered.
TVC measures the amount of capital explicitly protected by a defined risk transfer mechanism. If TVL tells you how much money is on hand, TVC tells you how much money the system is willing to defend. That’s a much better indicator of institutional readiness, because serious allocators aren’t just asking how much capital is in a market. They ask how much capital can be deployed with known drawbacks. They want to understand the capacity for protected capital, and not just the appetite for risk.
A TVC framework changes incentives in the right direction.
Under a TVL-first model, protocols compete to maximize deposits. The easiest way to do that is often to increase revenues, increase incentives, or simplify distribution. Under a TVC-aware model, protocols must increase the amount of capital they can safely support. Better governance, cleaner dependencies, stronger controls, better monitoring and more resilient architecture are starting to become economically important as they increase coverage capacity and reduce the cost of protection. The competition shifts from attracting the most capital to defending the most capital.
That shift would make DeFi healthier.
It would give users, partners, and allocators a clearer picture of which protocols are actually built to last. It would also create a more useful benchmark for the next generation of on-chain products, especially those designed for institutions and mainstream users. In a more mature market, the question shouldn’t just be how much capital a protocol can accumulate. It should be how much capital it can protect against stress.
That is the real path from crypto-native growth to institutional scale.

