The New DeFi Battle: Platforms Compete to Enter Traditional Businesses
- Stable Vaults is Aave's new bet to gain institutional space.
- Aave, Morpho, and other protocols compete to attract business integrations.
Currently, decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols are seeking to position themselves as a financial infrastructure that can be used by traditional companies. In this race, Aave launched Stable Vaults on July 9, 2026, a tool that allows fintechs, wallets, and payment applications to offer yield products with stablecoins without having to create their own systems based on cryptocurrency networks.
The tool works through "vaults" or digital vaults: products that pool funds from multiple users and place them in various strategies to attempt to generate yield. Instead of a company having to develop and manage the entire system necessary to seek those yields, it can connect to an already created vault and offer that service within its own application.
Each vault has rules defined by its administrator, such as which stablecoins it accepts, who can access the product, and what yield it aims to offer. If the strategies generate income exceeding the committed yield, the surplus can be distributed according to the rules defined for each vault, including possible incentives for its administrator.
In the case of Stable Vaults, it uses external systems to adjust how funds are distributed among the various available strategies. This allows capital management to adapt according to market conditions, but it also introduces an additional dependency that can represent an operational risk during periods of high volatility.
This launch places Aave within a growing competition among DeFi protocols seeking to become service providers for businesses. One of its main competitors is Morpho, a platform that also allows the creation of yield products through managed vaults.
Although both protocols aim to facilitate access to financial services based on cryptocurrency networks, their models are different. Aave primarily functions as a lending market: users deposit assets and other participants can borrow them, generating interest that is distributed among those who provided liquidity.
Morpho, on the other hand, focuses on products where specialized managers select the strategies they consider most suitable for generating yield and managing risk. As reported by CriptoNoticias, this flexibility allowed the protocol to gain traction among companies looking to offer financial services without building their own infrastructure from scratch.
In this scenario, companies like Coinbase and Robinhood utilized solutions based on Morpho for products related to yield generation on digital assets, increasing competition for attracting institutional integrations.
But the dispute is not only between Aave and Morpho; it also includes other protocols like Yearn, Beefy, and Spark, which have developed similar products to group investment strategies and facilitate access to yields generated on cryptocurrency networks.
Although Stable Vaults aims to attract financial companies, its initial adoption is still limited. According to analyses published after the launch, the total value locked in the product was around $1,400 on July 10, 2026, a day after its presentation.
This figure is small compared to the billions of dollars managed by Aave in its various markets and shows that the tool is still in an early stage, before having relevant integrations from fintechs or financial institutions.
Moreover, these products carry liquidity-related risks. As funds can be distributed among different strategies, withdrawals depend on sufficient availability to return money to users at the requested time.
There are also precedents within the DeFi ecosystem itself. Aave, despite being one of the most established protocols in the sector, faced episodes of uncollectible debt associated with problematic loans and assets with low liquidity, situations that led the community to implement mechanisms to cover losses.
For now, the competition between Aave, Morpho, and other protocols shows that the next stage of DeFi will not solely depend on offering higher yields but on becoming an infrastructure that companies can integrate with confidence. The challenge will be to transform tools originally designed for specialized users into simple-to-use financial services without losing transparency about the risks that exist behind each product.
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