Seven days of DAO activity yielded a buyback proposal from Lido, a big decision on Aave V4 implementation, a painful restructuring at Balancer, a tokenomics overhaul at Lista, lingering fallout from the Resolv incident, and an ECB paper that put a number on something DeFi insiders have long suspected about board concentration.
What happened in DAO proposals and discussions in the last 7 days 🧠👇
1. @LidoFinance DAO proposed an amount of $20 million $LDO token buyback, using 10,000 stETH from the treasury.
2. @aave DAO votes on the updated Aave Will Win Framework.
3. Aave DAO has approved to deploy Aave V4 on… pic.twitter.com/abt4JYiQ37
— Pink Brains (@PinkBrains_io) April 4, 2026
Here’s what actually happened last week on the major DAO proposals and discussions.
Lido and Aave are making important steps in the field of finance and architecture
Lido Finance DAO proposed an amount of $20 million $LDO token buyback funded by 10,000 stETH from the treasury. Buyback proposals from major DeFi protocols are meaningful signals about how DAOs are thinking about token value and treasury stakes, and Lido is using stETH, the protocol’s native staking product, to $LDO repurchases create a direct link between the protocol’s revenue-generating assets and the market support of the governance token.
Aave’s week was busy on two fronts. The DAO is currently voting on the updated Aave Will Win Framework, a strategic document that outlines the protocol’s competitive direction. Separately, the DAO approved the implementation of Aave V4 on Ethereum, which is the most immediate consequence.
Aave V4 introduces a hub-and-spoke architecture where a shared liquidity hub connects to isolated spokes, each with its own risk parameters. This structure allows Aave to serve different risk profiles without fragmenting core liquidity, which has been one of the more difficult technical problems in money market design.
The approval moves one of DeFi’s largest protocols to an architecture that has been in development for some time.
Balancer will restructure after operating from November 2025
Balancer’s situation is the toughest story in this week’s DAO roundup. After the November 2025 V2 exploit, the protocol has undergone significant restructuring: the team has been reduced by 50%, the annual budget has been reduced by 34% to $1.9 million, veBAL has been settled and emissions have been reduced. The restructuring also redirects 100% of the protocol costs to the DAO treasury instead of distributing them through the previous model.
A 50% team reduction after an exploit reflects the increasing difficulty that follows a major security incident in DeFi. The direct damage is financial, but the secondary effects on team morale, user confidence, and protocol development capacity are equally serious.
Balancer’s decision to concentrate all protocol costs in the DAO treasury while operating on a reduced budget suggests that the protocol is prioritizing financial stability and community control over growth spending, at least in the short term.
Whether the limited team and budget can maintain the protocol’s competitiveness in an active DEX market is the question that arises from these decisions.
Fluid, Lista and Resolv tackle incidents and tokenomics
Fluid has repaid approximately $70 million in USR-related debt on BNB and Plasma following the Resolv incident, with a user compensation plan to be released soon. The speed of the refund reflects both the seriousness with which Fluid treated the obligation and the extent of the interconnections between DeFi protocols that ensure the fallout from one incident spreads quickly across related systems.
Resolv Labs has provided an update on the USR incident, reporting that 1:1 refunds are underway, no insider involvement in the investigation has been found, and recovery efforts continue. The finding of no insider involvement is important for community trust, even as technical remediation work continues.
Lista DAO unveiled Tokenomics 2.0, removing the velISTA mechanism, simplifying governance, and introducing LISTA buybacks in addition to revenue sharing for LISTA holders. Removing the veToken mechanisms is a notable choice that goes against the dominant trend in governance design over the past two years. This suggests that Lista’s team concluded that veLISTA’s complexity and lock-up mechanisms created more friction than value.
P2P futarchy proposal and the ECB’s governance warning
P2P.me has opened a proposal on MetaDAO’s Futarchy to buy back up to $500,000 USDC worth of P2P tokens at 8% below the ICO price. Futarchy-based decision-making, where markets rather than votes determine governance outcomes, is still so rare in practice that any live proposal is worth monitoring as a test of how the mechanism performs under real-world conditions.
Perhaps the most politically important item of the week is the ECB’s article finding that DeFi governance is highly concentrated, with the top 100 addresses holding more than 80% of the governance power in protocols like Aave, MakerDAO, and Uniswap, and that many of these addresses are controlled by protocols or exchanges rather than by individual users.
This finding quantifies a concern that has been qualitatively discussed for years and gives regulators and critics a specific figure to cite when arguing that DeFi governance is not functioning as described in most protocol documentation.
Conclusion
This week’s DAO activity covered the full range of what decentralized governance looks like in practice: proactive treasury management from Lido, architectural advances at Aave, crisis response at Balancer and Resolv, tokenomics evolution at Lista, and an ECB regulatory data point that the industry will need to get serious about.

