I realized one thing: in DeFi, what I’ve been researching is no longer about returns, but about when the project team will change the rules.
You just understood the gameplay, and the parameters change; You just calculated the returns, and the pool structure shifts. It’s not that you judged incorrectly, but that the rules themselves are unstable. So now, when I look at projects, the first question I ask is: can this thing be arbitrarily changed? It’s under this mindset that I started observing @LoopFinance_Bsc. I first threw in 5000 USD to test the waters; it now conducts timed purchases, which isn’t very friendly to lazy investors. Small funds can try it out, but large funds should do their due diligence first. My first impression of Loop isn’t “can it take off,” but that it has a lot of rules. Budgeting, allocation, buybacks, and burns are all written into the smart contract, Even the team doesn’t have permission to modify it; power and money are locked on-chain, and the code has undergone a full audit. Currently, Loop offers DEX, staking, and farming, $LOOP more like a rights certificate, managed by DAO, capable of generating yield, and continuously bought back and burned. More importantly, there’s the subsequent sysfi derivative platform: Users deposit money, the protocol makes profits, and the profits are automatically used to buy back and burn $LOOP according to the contract, not relying on subsidies to artificially boost TVL, but making the treasury thicker and reducing circulation. Whether it succeeds or not is another matter. But in an environment where rules can be changed at any time in DeFi, projects that first lock in rules and lock up power are at least worth monitoring. I am observing Loop Finance. Not because it promises huge profits, but because it made me realize anew: In DeFi, stable rules are inherently valuable. Portal:
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I realized one thing: in DeFi, what I’ve been researching is no longer about returns, but about when the project team will change the rules.
You just understood the gameplay, and the parameters change;
You just calculated the returns, and the pool structure shifts.
It’s not that you judged incorrectly, but that the rules themselves are unstable.
So now, when I look at projects, the first question I ask is: can this thing be arbitrarily changed?
It’s under this mindset that I started observing @LoopFinance_Bsc. I first threw in 5000 USD to test the waters; it now conducts timed purchases, which isn’t very friendly to lazy investors. Small funds can try it out, but large funds should do their due diligence first.
My first impression of Loop isn’t “can it take off,” but that it has a lot of rules.
Budgeting, allocation, buybacks, and burns are all written into the smart contract,
Even the team doesn’t have permission to modify it; power and money are locked on-chain, and the code has undergone a full audit.
Currently, Loop offers DEX, staking, and farming,
$LOOP more like a rights certificate, managed by DAO, capable of generating yield, and continuously bought back and burned.
More importantly, there’s the subsequent sysfi derivative platform:
Users deposit money, the protocol makes profits,
and the profits are automatically used to buy back and burn $LOOP according to the contract,
not relying on subsidies to artificially boost TVL, but making the treasury thicker and reducing circulation.
Whether it succeeds or not is another matter. But in an environment where rules can be changed at any time in DeFi,
projects that first lock in rules and lock up power are at least worth monitoring.
I am observing Loop Finance.
Not because it promises huge profits,
but because it made me realize anew:
In DeFi, stable rules are inherently valuable.
Portal: