The leveraged yield farming protocol looks to put multiple missteps in the past with a successful relaunch.
After a rocky first quarter, decentralized finance (DeFi) platform Alpha Homora announced the relaunch of its v2 leveraged yield farming program today — and so far both traders and users are celebrating as both total value locked (TVL) and ALPHA token prices soar.
The version 2 of the platform, which allows for leverage up to 7x on popular yield farming positions on protocols such as Sushi, Curve, and Balancer, notably had to shut down to new positions after a devastating hack in February. The protocol suffered $37 million in losses, which counts among the most devastating exploits in DeFi history.
However, the relaunch so far has gone swimmingly by multiple metrics. The ALPHA token — which underwent a revamped tokeneconomic design during the downtime — is up 11.1% to $2.28 on the day, and TVL has increased by nearly $100 million since the relaunch to a total of $675 million.
#AlphaHomoraV2 now has…
$675M TVL
$500M lent
$170M collateral
$99M borrowed
Though the demand to use the product is high, we’ll maintain security measure that we set out to do by keeping $100M credit limit for now.
Will actively monitor & increase accordingly
— Alpha Finance Lab (@AlphaFinanceLab) May 13, 2021
It now remains to be seen how long the protocol will remain stable. In addition to the February exploit, the platform was tied to Rari Capital’s $11 million loss earlier this week, though that particular exploit was due to no fault on Alpha Finance Lab’s part.
The relaunched v2 also came with a new set of audits, but ultimately the greatest test of a DeFi protocol is time — the longer it’s survived scrutiny from would-be exploiters, the more users can trust its longevity.
Some observers are additionally off-put by Alpha’s unusual model, which has little precedent in Tradfi. However Leo Cheng of C.R.E.A.M. Finance, whose Iron Bank protocol-to-protocol lending platform enables v2’s leveraged yield farming, argued in an interview with Cointelegraph that if flash loans can be a key cog in DeFi’s capital efficiency, leveraged lending is a logical next step.
By nature, says Cheng, a smart contract “doesn’t quite care, and it doesn’t quite see the borders with the smart contract projects” with regards to where funds are coming from. As long as a transaction will end with the various protocols involved in the green, the transaction will go through.
Alpha Finance Labs did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
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Author: Andrew Thurman