The crypto return was simple: accept the risk of a smart contract, earn more than at a bank. It doesn’t work that way anymore.
Today, Aave, the largest DeFi lending protocol by deposit base, offers just 1.84% on the world’s largest stablecoin, USDT, and an equally dismal 2.61% APY on the Coinbase-Circle stablecoin. $USDC.
Lido, the largest Ethereum liquid staking service, yields just 2.53%.
In contrast, Interactive Brokers pays 3.14% on idle cash with no lock-up and no risk of crypto exploitation. Another basic savings account with high returns at Axos Bank pays 4.21%.
The risk premium that justified DeFi’s existence has been reversed.
Many of DeFi’s flagship products now pay less than a federally insured deposit account. Trader James Christoph posted what the rest of the market was starting to think: “DeFi – Earn 1% less than Treasuries and lose all your money once a year.”
Defi – Earn 1% less than t accounts and lose all your money once a year
— James Christoph (@JamesChristoph) March 22, 2026
The yield compression is structural
Ethereum staking returns have fallen from over 5% shortly after the Merge blockchain fork to just 2.7%, with over 38 million ether now competing for the same validator rewards.
The yield of Ethena, whose crypto dollarsUSDe once yielded more than 50% APY in 2024, is compressed 93% to just 3.56%, while its total value has more than halved.
The CoinDesk at night rate which Aave daily borrowing cost benchmarks – a crypto play on the actual daily rate for Fed funds – has collapsed after interest rate spikes into the double-digit percentage range, before settling at around 3% today.
Depending on the day of the past month, CoinDesk’s overnight rate has actually and quite embarrassingly been lower than the actual overnight rate for US banks.
Across the stablecoin lending landscape, the picture is uniformly bleak. Compound only pays 2.55% $USDC deposits. Sky’s USDS savings rate is 3.75%, the highest among blue chip protocols, but it gets about 70% of its revenue from external sources, including US Treasuries and Coinbase $USDC rewards.
Bitcoin, which used to attract high interest rates from borrowers demanding BTC loans, now earns next to nothing on platforms that previously paid handsome premiums.
Many DeFi investors need to ride the risk curve towards madness to outperform TradFi.
High Interest Rates to Haircuts: Has DeFi Learned Anything from the Collapse of the Interest Rate Vault?
Tokenized TradFi replaces DeFi
As cryptocurrency returns collapse, tokenized versions of traditional fixed income products are growing into a $10 billion industry.
- BlackRock’s BUIDL fund holds over $2 billion in assets and delivers an APY of 3.47%.
- Ondo Finance’s USDY manages $1.8 billion, yielding 3.55%.
- Franklin Templeton’s BENJI owns over $1 billion and pays 3.54%.
- Superstate’s USTB, a US government tokenized securities fund, owns $646 million and pays 3.47%.
The average seven-day APY in the tokenized treasury sector is approximately 3.38%. That TradFi return, in terms of tokens, exceeds Aave’s offering from crypto’s two largest DeFi stablecoin pools.
The inversion is complete. An investor who chooses Aave’s $USDC pool over a tokenized Treasury fund accepts smart contract risks, regulatory uncertainty, and the possibility of a protocol exploit for a lower return.
The premium for accepting smart contract risk is not just compressed. For many average savers in average liquidity pools, things have turned negative.

