DeFi addresses a key inefficiency as protocols begin to recapture more value once it is captured during liquidations by third-party Maximum Extractable Value (MEV) bots.
For years, bots have exploited liquidation windows, extracting profits while leaking value from users and weakening the sustainability of protocols over time.
Because this leak became too big to ignore, Ethereum arrived [ETH] Credit markets began holding approximately $2.16 billion in liquidable positions.
Within this, Compound accounted for $1.23 billion, while Sky held around $801 million, highlighting continued extraction opportunities during volatility.

However, protocols redesign mechanisms through auctions and controlled liquidations to preserve value internally rather than letting it escape. This shift changes who benefits from market stress, allowing protocols to capture and recycle value rather than lose it.
As a result, DeFi strengthens its economic structure, improves sustainability and strengthens long-term resilience
Aave reclaims MEV while SVR reforms liquidation flows
Aaf [$AAVE] not only refines its system; it extends a model that is already changing the way value moves during liquidations. After proving effective on Ethereum, where Aave recaptured more than $16.7 million in MEV, the protocol now extends SVR to Arbitrum and Base.

This expansion is happening because the previous model left too much value on the table. Bots consistently made liquidation profits, especially during volatility, while protocols provided little benefit. SVR changes this by directing that power back into the Aave ecosystem.
As this rollout scales across chains, liquidation events no longer act as pure extraction points. Instead, they become controlled revenue channels that strengthen the protocol.
The implications of these changes are clear. Aave converts volatility into income, improving sustainability and setting a precedent for how DeFi protocols capture value in the future.
SVR increases turnover, but sustainability remains uncertain
As SVR begins to scale across networks, the focus shifts from early success to whether these gains can actually be sustained over time. The initial results look strong, but raise a deeper question about sustainability.
Aave now has nearly $23.87 billion in TVL, while its 30-day revenue is $6.24 million, indicating an annual run rate of $76 million. This growth is not coincidental, as liquidation activities now directly contribute to protocol revenues.
This shift is happening because value no longer escapes to bots, but instead flows back into the ecosystem, strengthening internal cash flow. However, this power is conditional. Revenue increases due to volatility and credit demand, but declines as activity slows.
All in all, this approach produces a clear result. SVR improves Aave’s economics, but only sustained market activity can translate these gains into sustainable value growth.
Final summary
- The Aave protocol internalizes MEV via SVR, amplifying DeFi’s shift towards sustainable value creation.
- $AAVE shows rising revenues and improved efficiency, but long-term growth remains subject to volatility.

