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Bitcoin’s sharp price swings in early 2026 proved challenging for many investors, but for one DeFi protocol, volatility became a source of revenue. Yield Basis, a liquidity platform built on Curve Finance infrastructure, reported $1.1 billion in trading volume and more than $12 million in fees during the first quarter.
The protocol is designed to capture trading activity during periods of price movement, allowing liquidity providers to earn fees while maintaining exposure to assets such as bitcoin and ethereum. Unlike many DeFi platforms that rely on token incentives, Yield Basis generates returns directly from trading flows.
By the end of March, the platform held about $180 million in total value locked. Its largest pool, a bitcoin-denominated pairing, accounted for roughly $174 million of that total.
Activity peaked during periods of heightened volatility. In the two weeks following January 28, when BTC experienced a sharp downturn followed by rapid rebounds, the protocol processed around $436 million in volume. During that stretch, it generated approximately $6 million in trading fees.
Across the quarter, the pattern remained similar: as prices moved sharply, traders repositioned, driving higher volumes and increasing fee generation. Around $1.2 million was distributed to token holders in February alone.
User participation increased alongside activity. The amount of YB tokens locked in the protocol rose from 53 million to 89 million during the quarter, indicating growing demand to capture fee-based returns.
The platform also began expanding its infrastructure. A recently launched Hybrid Vault, designed to link liquidity provision with demand for crvUSD, attracted $4.54 million in deposits within its first week, including nearly $2 million in the stablecoin.
Michael Egorov, founder of Curve Finance and Yield Basis, said the protocol was designed to address a structural gap in decentralized finance.
“Yield Basis was created to solve the core inefficiency in DeFi that bitcoin could not generate sustainable yield, because impermanent loss (IL) made liquidity provision inefficient. By eliminating IL, Yield Basis removes this limitation, creating a model where liquidity providers can earn organic yield from trading activity.”
The model targets a long-standing issue in automated market makers known as impermanent loss, where liquidity providers can underperform during price swings. By focusing on volatility-driven trading, Yield Basis aims to offset that risk with higher fee income.
The results also point to a broader shift within decentralized finance. As markets mature, protocols are increasingly exploring ways to generate sustainable revenue beyond token issuance.
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