DeFi Protocols for Loanable Funds: Interest Rates, Liquidity and Market Efficiency

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Abstract

We coin the term Protocols for Loanable Funds (PLFs) to refer to protocols which establish distributed ledger-based markets for loanable funds. PLFs are emerging as one of the main applications within Decentralized Finance (DeFi), and use smart contract code to facilitate the intermediation of loanable funds. In doing so, these protocols allow agents to borrow and save programmatically. Within these protocols, interest rate mechanisms seek to equilibrate the supply and demand for funds. In this paper, we review the methodologies used to set interest rates on three prominent DeFi PLFs, namely Compound, Aave and dYdX. We provide an empirical examination of how these interest rate rules have behaved since their inception in response to differing degrees of liquidity. We then investigate the market efficiency and inter-connectedness between multiple protocols, examining first whether Uncovered Interest Parity holds within a particular protocol and second whether the interest rates for a particular token market show dependence across protocols, developing a Vector Error Correction Model for the dynamics.

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Gudgeon, L., Werner, S., Perez, D., & Knottenbelt, W. J. (2020). DeFi Protocols for Loanable Funds: Interest Rates, Liquidity and Market Efficiency. In AFT 2020 - Proceedings of the 2nd ACM Conference on Advances in Financial Technologies (pp. 92–112). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3419614.3423254

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