The post Users blast curators Re7 and Silo for handling of DeFi turmoil appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Three weeks ago, alarm bells began to ring over a “daisy chain of circular lending” between crypto yield-farming vaults. Since then, the spectacular collapse of Stream Finance saw depegs, bad debt and millions of dollars trapped in low-liquidity markets. The responses of some of the “curators” behind the vaults has left something to be desired, however. Curators are responsible for setting parameters on permissionless lending markets used to lever up user deposits. Read more: Stream Finance meltdown: winners and losers in DeFi ‘risk curator’ reckoning Re7 Labs’ ‘extensive update’ proves a nothingburger Re7 Labs has been relatively quiet over its vaults’ purported $27 million of exposure to the collapse. The last post with any real detail came almost two weeks ago, before users were asked last Friday to “bear with us” and hold out for an “extensive update… in the first half of next week.” Yesterday evening, the long-awaited update came. The post (replies disabled) states that Re7 Labs is “actively moving forward with… legal actions, and assessing the likelihood of recovery.” However, it’s yet to receive any “satisfactory response” from counterparties Stream Finance or Stable Labs. Users weren’t impressed. One asked simply, “Is this a joke?” while another pointed to the post’s delay and lack of substance. A third described Re7 Labs’ strategy as “Delay and Dilute” while “building a future liability-shielding narrative.” A fourth user’s comment reads, “Handing over money for you to manage is truly eight lifetimes of bad luck.” Read more: High yields to haircuts: Has DeFi learned anything from yield vault collapse? Silo users miss liquidity window Silo Finance yesterday announced a $1.5 million repayment to the xUSD/USDC market on Arbitrum. The liquidity was snapped up within half an hour, with Silo’s post coming 28 minutes after the last significant withdrawal. Users who were unable… The post Users blast curators Re7 and Silo for handling of DeFi turmoil appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Three weeks ago, alarm bells began to ring over a “daisy chain of circular lending” between crypto yield-farming vaults. Since then, the spectacular collapse of Stream Finance saw depegs, bad debt and millions of dollars trapped in low-liquidity markets. The responses of some of the “curators” behind the vaults has left something to be desired, however. Curators are responsible for setting parameters on permissionless lending markets used to lever up user deposits. Read more: Stream Finance meltdown: winners and losers in DeFi ‘risk curator’ reckoning Re7 Labs’ ‘extensive update’ proves a nothingburger Re7 Labs has been relatively quiet over its vaults’ purported $27 million of exposure to the collapse. The last post with any real detail came almost two weeks ago, before users were asked last Friday to “bear with us” and hold out for an “extensive update… in the first half of next week.” Yesterday evening, the long-awaited update came. The post (replies disabled) states that Re7 Labs is “actively moving forward with… legal actions, and assessing the likelihood of recovery.” However, it’s yet to receive any “satisfactory response” from counterparties Stream Finance or Stable Labs. Users weren’t impressed. One asked simply, “Is this a joke?” while another pointed to the post’s delay and lack of substance. A third described Re7 Labs’ strategy as “Delay and Dilute” while “building a future liability-shielding narrative.” A fourth user’s comment reads, “Handing over money for you to manage is truly eight lifetimes of bad luck.” Read more: High yields to haircuts: Has DeFi learned anything from yield vault collapse? Silo users miss liquidity window Silo Finance yesterday announced a $1.5 million repayment to the xUSD/USDC market on Arbitrum. The liquidity was snapped up within half an hour, with Silo’s post coming 28 minutes after the last significant withdrawal. Users who were unable…

Users blast curators Re7 and Silo for handling of DeFi turmoil

2025/11/22 02:15

Three weeks ago, alarm bells began to ring over a “daisy chain of circular lending” between crypto yield-farming vaults.

Since then, the spectacular collapse of Stream Finance saw depegs, bad debt and millions of dollars trapped in low-liquidity markets.

The responses of some of the “curators” behind the vaults has left something to be desired, however. Curators are responsible for setting parameters on permissionless lending markets used to lever up user deposits.

Read more: Stream Finance meltdown: winners and losers in DeFi ‘risk curator’ reckoning

Re7 Labs’ ‘extensive update’ proves a nothingburger

Re7 Labs has been relatively quiet over its vaults’ purported $27 million of exposure to the collapse.

The last post with any real detail came almost two weeks ago, before users were asked last Friday to “bear with us” and hold out for an “extensive update… in the first half of next week.”

Yesterday evening, the long-awaited update came. The post (replies disabled) states that Re7 Labs is “actively moving forward with… legal actions, and assessing the likelihood of recovery.”

However, it’s yet to receive any “satisfactory response” from counterparties Stream Finance or Stable Labs.

Users weren’t impressed. One asked simply, “Is this a joke?” while another pointed to the post’s delay and lack of substance.

A third described Re7 Labs’ strategy as “Delay and Dilute” while “building a future liability-shielding narrative.”

A fourth user’s comment reads, “Handing over money for you to manage is truly eight lifetimes of bad luck.”

Read more: High yields to haircuts: Has DeFi learned anything from yield vault collapse?

Silo users miss liquidity window

Silo Finance yesterday announced a $1.5 million repayment to the xUSD/USDC market on Arbitrum. The liquidity was snapped up within half an hour, with Silo’s post coming 28 minutes after the last significant withdrawal.

Users who were unable to withdraw were upset at having missed the window. To some, pro-rata socialized losses would be preferable to a first-come, first-served system in which lucky users are made whole, plus interest.

Read more: From sweet to sour: Core slaps Maple with injunction over ‘syrupBTC’

They accuse Silo Finance of “backroom deals” with Varlamore, the manager of the vault in question. Varlamore’s website, as another user highlighted, states the firm “consists of builders from Silo and more.”

Other users chimed in. One called the move “shady af” and another said “this fake refund is just a publicity stunt.”

Multiple users claimed to have been banned from Silo’s Discord for pressing the matter.

Silo didn’t directly address these concerns, instead announcing a further $645,000 of repayments in exactly the same manner.

Euler’s compensation dilemma

A governance forum post to Euler Finance argues that, while “Euler bears no legal liability…, the reputational risk and user confidence impact are undeniable.”

Most comments support the idea, with the occasional warning against “any smash-and-grab treasury policy.”

One reply argues the request is “like asking Uniswap for compensation because a pool has been rug pulled” and that large EUL holders would vote down any such proposal.

A response from Euler Labs states the “protocol operated as designed throughout.” However, it encourages the governance process and “will not participate in the vote to avoid any conflicts of interest.”

Lido’s Hasu argues compensating users sets a precedent whereby “curators and unworthy borrowers capture the upside, while downside risks are outsourced to Euler.”

More broadly, GFX Labs’ PaperImperium believes platforms such as Euler and Morpho should protect their reputation by “run[ning] as quickly as they can away from hosting their own branded front ends.”

It recommend “an arm’s length third-party front end,” comparing the situation to a menu being blamed for a bad meal.

Got a tip? Send us an email securely via Protos Leaks. For more informed news, follow us on X, Bluesky, and Google News, or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Source: https://protos.com/users-blast-curators-re7-and-silo-for-handling-of-defi-turmoil/

Piyasa Fırsatı
Blast Logosu
Blast Fiyatı(BLAST)
$0.0007187
$0.0007187$0.0007187
-3.38%
USD
Blast (BLAST) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen [email protected] ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

AI Startup Surge Risks Repeating Tech’s Last Funding Mania

AI Startup Surge Risks Repeating Tech’s Last Funding Mania

The AI startup frenzy and FOMO are inflating round sizes and valuations. Yes, the potential is huge. But too much capital too early often leads to mediocre outcomes. Remake of 2020–22?
Paylaş
Hackernoon2025/09/19 12:14
Bitcoin ETFs Revive with $241 Million Inflow, Ethereum ETFs Report Lowest Trading Value of the Week

Bitcoin ETFs Revive with $241 Million Inflow, Ethereum ETFs Report Lowest Trading Value of the Week

The post Bitcoin ETFs Revive with $241 Million Inflow, Ethereum ETFs Report Lowest Trading Value of the Week appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News On September 24, the US spot Bitcoin ETF saw a combined inflow of $241.00 million, while Ethereum ETFs continued their day 3 streak of outflow. It recorded a total net outflow of $79.36 million, as per the SoSoValue report.  Bitcoin ETF Breakdown  After two consecutive days of experiencing huge sell-offs, Bitcoin ETFs finally managed to record an inflow of $241.00 million. BlackRock IBIT led with $128.90 million, and Ark and 21Shares ARKB followed with $37.72 million.  Additional gains were made by Fidelity FBTC, Bitwise BITB, and Grayscale BTC of $29.70 million, $24.69 million, and $13.56 million, respectively. VanEck HODL also made a smaller addition of $6.42 million in inflows.  Despite the inflows, the total trading value of the Bitcoin ETF dropped to $2.58 billion, with total net assets $149.74 billion. This marks 6.62% of Bitcoin market cap, slightly higher than the previous day.  Ethereum ETF Breakdown  Ethereum ETFs saw a total outflow of $79.36 million, with Fidelity’s FETH leading with $33.26 million. BlackRock ETHA also experienced heavy selling pressure of $26.47 million, followed by Grayscale’s ETHE $8.91 million. 21Shares TETH and Bitwise ETHW also posted smaller withdrawals of $6.24 million and $4.48 million, respectively.  The total trading value of Ethereum ETFs dropped below a billion, reaching $971.79 million. Net assets came in at $27.42 billion, representing 5.45% of the Ethereum market cap.  Ethereum ETF Market Context  Bitcoin is trading at $111,766, signalling a 4.6% drop compared to a week ago. Its market cap has also dipped to $2.225 trillion. Its daily trading volume has reached $49.837 billion, showing mild progress there.  Ethereum is priced at $4,011.92, with a market cap of $483.822 billion, showing a sharp decline. Its trading volume has also slipped to $37.680 billion, reflecting a slow market.  Due to heavy outflow this week, Bitcoin and Ethereum’s prices are experiencing price swings. Crypto analysts from Bloomberg warn the market to brace for further volatility.  
Paylaş
Coinstats2025/09/25 18:40
Son of filmmaker Rob Reiner charged with homicide for death of his parents

Son of filmmaker Rob Reiner charged with homicide for death of his parents

FILE PHOTO: Rob Reiner, director of "The Princess Bride," arrives for a special 25th anniversary viewing of the film during the New York Film Festival in New York
Paylaş
Rappler2025/12/16 09:59