‘Better as friends’: DeFi protocols Yearn and Cover announce cessation of merger

Published at: March 5, 2021

Decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols Yearn Finance and Cover have announced today the end of a protocol merger process initiated in November last year. 

The two protocols were initially linked during a spree of a half-dozen Yearn acquisitions, mergers, or collaborations, the exact term depending on the project. The split comes as a surprise to many, given that Cover, a protocol that provides coverage or insurance for DeFi deposits, was a natural fit for yield vault provider Yearn. The teams had also collaborated in crisis situations in the past, such as when Cover experienced an “infinite mint” hack in late December 2020.

We have decided to end the previously announced merger process of Yearn and Cover. Both protocols will continue to operate independently. yVault depositors who have previously purchased Cover protection are unaffected by this.

— yearn.finance (@iearnfinance) March 5, 2021

Following the hack of Yearn’s DAI vault earlier this month the team also announced that coverage from Cover would become standard across all vaults. According to Cover core contributor “DeFi Ted”, Yearn will now be moving forward independently with their own insurance offering. 

Both teams confirmed that users can continue to purchase coverage for Yearn deposits, and that current coverage will be unaffected.

Comments from both teams indicate that the cessation was an emotional, potentially snap decision — one rooted in potential conflicts of interest related to Cover’s new protocol, Ruler.

Emotional responses

In a since-deleted Tweet, Yearn founder Andre Cronje weighed in in the split, portraying it as a breach of trust:

“Personally, this was very sad to see. I had very high regard, trust, and faith in the Cover team. Lesson learned. Wont trust them again.” 

He’s since followed up with another, similarly cryptic Tweet: 

Deleted my previous tweet. It was an emotional response. Twitter isn't the place for that. I often forget ethics and money don't mix.

— Andre Cronje (@AndreCronjeTech) March 5, 2021

DeFi Ted told Cointelegraph that the two teams had recently met to discuss providing coverage for Yearn’s vaults, and the Yearn representatives reached out shortly after to reveal they would be building their own insurance/coverage offering. 

Ted added he was personally “a bit blind sided” by the decision, which he says was given with four hours notice prior to the Yearn announcement on Twitter. On official social channels Cover team members characterized the split as a “difference of opinion,” and likened it to a romantic relationship in which both parties discover that they’re “better as friends.”

“Honestly feel a little lost right now sir,” said Ted.

A core Yearn operations contributor declined to comment.

Can’t fork and be friends

Some community members have speculated that Yearn’s decision is related to the launch of Ruler Protocol, a lending solution from core Cover contributors that kicked off a liquidity mining program this week. The Yearn ecosystem already includes one lending platform, CREAM Finance, and core contributor “banteg” has hinted on Twitter that the team isn’t appreciative of competitive overlap from collaborating teams:

Friends don’t fork friends

— banteg (@bantg) January 21, 2021

Ted confirmed to Cointelegraph that the split is related to Ruler, but said that there’s “no conflict” between the various protocols, and instead that there was concern from Yearn about the Cover team “running two projects.” 

“In fact, we have a great relationship with Leo and CREAM, don't be surprised to see us do something with them,” he said.

The price for Cover’s native governance token, $COVER, has plummeted on the news, down 35% to $605 at the time of publication.

Nonetheless, Ted and other team members say they remain resolute in building, and that the split is just another chapter in what has been a tumultuous history featuring multiple forks and re-launches. 

“The COVER journey has definitely been unique.”
Tags
Dao
Related Posts
As Yearn.Finance’s yield vaults grow, ‘crop’ projects define boundaries
With millions and even billions of dollars at stake, industrial-scale yield farming is leading to pockets of resistance as some projects refuse to be left with the chaff. In the past week, team members from no-loss lottery project PoolTogether and exchange liquidity pool provider Curve Finance have proposed ways to reduce the load Yearn.Finance strategies place on their protocols and governance tokens. In a Tweet on Sunday, PoolTogether co-founder Leighton Cusack noted that Yearn has become the primary beneficiary of many of the protocol’s DAI lotteries, as Yearn controls 57% of all DAI funds ($27 million of the $47 million …
Ethereum / June 15, 2021
Badger DAO announces $21 million treasury diversification via VC partners
Some major venture capital names are ‘sett’ to join the Badger DAO community. Bitcoin on Ethereum-focused decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Badger DAO announced today a $21 million sale of DAO treasury assets to four major investors: Polychain Capital, Parafi Capital, Blockchain Capital, and noted whale wallet 0xB1. The sale was made as part of a wider “Treasury Diversification through Strategic Partnerships” plan first outlined in Badger Improvement Proposal (BIP) 37. The Badger treasury, currently worth over $600 million USD, is primarily allocated in $BADGER, the DAO’s native governance token, and $DIGG, a synthetic rebasing Bitcoin. According to Badger DAO founder …
Ethereum / March 3, 2021
Inverse Finance seizes tokens, ships code: Launches stablecoin lending protocol
Shortly after culling its community of inactive members, one of decentralized finance’s (DeFi) strangest experiments is launching a new stablecoin lending product. On Wednesday Inverse Finance revealed the Anchor Protocol, a money market built around DOLA, a protocol-native synthetic stablecoin. Based on “a modified fork of Compound,” in a blog post Inverse Finance founder Nour Haridy compares Anchor to Synthetix, which issues credit in the form of synthetic assets back by overleveraged collateral, and Compound, which issues credit in the form of crypto asset loans also backed by overleveraged collateral. Ultimately, Haridy sees these models as providing the same utility. …
Ethereum / Feb. 28, 2021
Alpha Homora loses $37 million following Iron Bank exploit
In one of the largest exploits of the DeFi era, this morning an attacker successfully drained over $37 million from Alpha Homora by leveraging Cream’s Iron Bank protocol-to-protocol lending platform. Alpha Finance Lab, whose protocol was audited by Quantstamp and Peckshield, announced on Twitter this morning that they were aware of an attack, that the “loophole” that allowed it had been patched, and that the team had a “prime suspect”: Dear Alpha community, we've been notified of an exploit on Alpha Homora V2. We're now working with @AndreCronjeTech and @CreamdotFinance together on this. The loophole has been patched. We're in …
Ethereum / Feb. 13, 2021
A million down, a billion to go: How does DeFi reach mass adoption?
A report on Friday from Ethereum metrics website Dune Analytics showed that the decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystem now counts over 1 million unique Ethereum addresses as participants — an over tenfold increase from the 91,000 addresses on Dec. 6, 2019. But while the growth has been undeniable, some experts caution not to interpret the milestone as a sign of widespread adoption. In fact, in order for DeFi to truly break mainstream, many of the emerging vertical’s proponents may have to rethink their communication and outreach strategies. The Dune Analytics report, compiled by aggregating the total number of addresses which have …
Blockchain / Dec. 7, 2020