~/defi/tvl $ cat stimuly-i-naemnyy-kapital.md
Borrowed Liquidity: Why Purchased TVL Disappears and What Remains
The problem of a cold start for DeFi is solved with money: pay for TVL with a token issuance or points-liquidity will follow. Lessons from the past decade: it will also disappear.
The Mercenary Economy
Farmers’ capital is professional: it enters at the start of incentives, milks the token issuance, sells rewards daily, and migrates on schedule. For the protocol, this is like renting a storefront: as long as you pay, the numbers look good; stop paying, and TVL deflates within weeks, while the sold rewards appear on the token’s chart as a perpetual downtrend. DeFi archaeology is full of “farm billionaires,” of whom only TVL percentages remain.
When Incentives Actually Work
- Incentives as marketing for a product that’s already needed: if users stick around after rewards are discontinued because of the product itself-the money bought their attention, but the product kept them.
- Targeted incentives: paying for specific liquidity depth in specific pairs (where the protocol is vulnerable) is more effective than a blanket token airdrop.
- Points instead of token distribution at least don’t drive the token price down before the TGE-but they build up disappointment for later.
User filter
Look at the protocol’s TVL broken down by “before/after incentives” (history on DeFiLlama): if every TVL surge coincides with a wave of rewards, there’s no organic growth. Betting on such a protocol’s token is a bet against the mercenaries’ migration schedule.