Paul Frambot: Morpho Labs – Peer-to-Peer DeFi Lending Protocol - podcast episode cover

Paul Frambot: Morpho Labs – Peer-to-Peer DeFi Lending Protocol

Jan 25, 20231 hr 7 minEp. 480
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Episode description

DeFi lending protocols operate accordingly to their smart contracts and are perfect examples of ‘Code is law’, even if some recent exploits have not quite abided to this harsh truth. From well established protocols to degenerate DeFi farms with astronomic APYs, they all mainly use liquidity pools. Morpho Labs proposes a peer-to-peer approach that operates on top of another protocol’s liquidity pool (i.e. Aave, Compound), offering better rates for lenders as well as borrowers.

We were joined by Paul Frambot, co-founder and CEO of Morpho Labs, to discuss about the benefits and challenges that arise from a peer-to-peer lender-borrower matching system and what failsafes are in place.

Topics covered in this episode:

  • Paul’s background and diving into DeFi
  • Founding and funding Morpho
  • The concept behind Morpho
  • Improving lending & borrowing APYs
  • How lenders and borrowers are matched
  • Managing gas fees in a P2P setting
  • Securing collateral in peer matches
  • Sharing liquidity with Aave and Compound
  • Morpho token economy
  • Managing liquidations
  • User experience & integrations
  • Morpho’s business model
  • Future roadmap

Episode links:

Sponsors:

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This episode is hosted by Sebastien Couture & Friederike Ernst. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/480

Transcript

Welcome to the epicenter of the show is talks about the Technologies projects and people driving decentralization and the blockchain revolution. I'm suggesting cuchillo and I'm here today with Medicare and just today, we're speaking with botafogo who is CEO of more for labs, more for labs is building the Morpher protocol, which is a default protocol that allows As you to improve your borrow and lend apy on on lending

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Try at Omni dot app. So Paul thanks for joining us today. It's been a long time coming and so yeah, happy to have you here. Yeah, definitely. Thanks for having me. I'm super excited to join today. As I mentioned before, I've been listening for a center for as long as I was into crypto. So very excited to be here today. Super nice. So, how long exactly is that boy? Tell us about your background and what do you have to be formal foe? Yeah, definitely.

I think my journey in crypto began when I was in high school and like, basically, you know, it was pure technical interest into blockchain up first. So is more into consensus algorithms and, and in Bitcoin in 2015-16 and really went into my stutters, did it, computer, science and math. Did a lot of work into like blockchain technology and how there's consensus algorithm could scale and ended up being interested. Specifically in if Theorem and

more. The application layer is smart contracts and and then D Phi and D Phi was really to me it's such an interesting use case of blockchain Technology. That's a I could not do anything else but work into that space so I just thought I'd put some research efforts there and yeah, this is how you know step by step. I came to to play around a protocols and I mean play around theoretically I mean like playing was the Concepts of the

protocol. I never really used defy in my previous, you know, before going into awful. And then I started designing protocols, like more for it and came to do more for laps to drop them off a protocol. So that's how I got into this basically. How come you never use / beforehand despite the fact that you were quite knowledgeable about about it? So busy what was missing for you to actually go, you know, headfirst into it and I think it was as simple as gas costs.

You know at the time I was like and I never invested in crypto specifically because I was too young to do. So at the time, like I did not pass my 18 years old and basically when I went into, To crypto. I like I could see you know all those girls exploding but they could not participate which was quite frustrating but then when time comes to play around with defy I was like gas price was completely out getting my season portfolio basically.

So that's probably the reason why but, you know, in practice I was more interested in Reading why peppers. And and you know, trying to make sense of what, you know, you just hope was doing and what weights different from Some traditional Finance what it brings to traditional Finance. What could it? You know, what value? It could bring to the world in general, I think it's not a

question. We asked sufficiently often especially in Defy. Is like, what is the specific added value that we bring to the end-user like if device Cal's to to make billions of users? But yeah, I was it was more intellectual interest. I would say that, you know, playing around So, I remember when you guys were just getting started and you you gave a talk at the Kiln office. I think it was probably one of the first talk to you gave and you know, explaining the concept of Morpho.

And you know what are the things that I thought was just like wild about your story and the story of the team is that when more for launch, you guys are all still in school. And in fact, I think the idea for Morpho came from one of your professors. Can you maybe just retell that story and yeah? How the, how the idea come to be? And that definitely, I think so. Back in I would say 2020, I had really two passions like the first one was blockchain technology and the second one

was enterpreneurship. And so you know intrapreneurship we often tell you like you have to get some sort of unfair Advantage such that You have something that you're that make you, you know, different from others and make you stand out. And this is how you become successful in entrepreneurship and was that in mines. I really love blockchain to, it made sense to develop change stuff and I decided to my goal at the time was pretty ambitious.

Was like, I want to be the most knowledgeable entrepreneur about blockchain about the technical specifics about blockchain in France. And so I decided to take every single course unlike Sarah. A whole course on blockchain and defy in Paris that existed. So I had like, you know, maybe 10 or 11 courses on top of my existing courses at University that I would take. And I came to to meet some of the best researchers in that space in Paris and and together,

we formed a think tank. And in that think tank we we basically met every, you know, twice, every every week, and basically, you know, just chat and discuss about mechanisms.

What? I can do better about them and then I would say like more for is a construction, a collective construction of so many different ideas that all came together and that the premise of it was during the same tank and like we had so many people saying hey like okay compound is doing the things this way when it's out there doing this this way and what are the technical limitation to be able to have, you know, better 100% Capital efficiency while still being

liquid? This kind of Russians and we ended up with the premise of more for. And then I said, okay, like let's get serious about this confounded more for labs and really regrouped a team of focal Founders. That as you mentioned were students at the time, which was quite funny.

But I mean somehow, you know, spending 10 years, 20 years in investment Banks can sort of, you know, probably constrain your branch too much such that you would not think of No, doing things and defy the same way, a student with no experience in traditional Finance. I mean, no professional experience would do this, is this is how we started. And, actually, until six months ago, I was still going to school and I just finished my head of state internship few, few few

months ago. And I'm here to get my diploma, by the way, but that's, that's another story. Yeah. That's incredible. And you guys, you know, I think it's also been really interesting about your journey is that that like you guys have built this protocol and just a few months ago, closed a very impressive finding around with some pretty, top-tier VCS, how

did that come to be? And what was the, what was the kind of Journey to getting, you know, a sixth easy, and all these, all these investors on board? Yeah, I think it's a good question. So maybe first just like to mention that it was during a market conditions that were quite favorable. Of course, it does not do it at everything, but like, that's probably not something that would be as easily doable.

I don't mean it was easy, it was hard to do, but it was maybe even harder in those market conditions, obviously. But basically, at the time we just had the concepts but it was such a zero to one in terms of mechanism design and Observe like how the team internally at mobs is conceptualizing. And thinking about Defy is like maybe we'll have the chance to talk about it was radically different from what other Protocols are doing in terms of you know Landing but also in

terms of Dexter's excetera. So we really wanted to be very very Innovative and at the same time so we had very very Innovative mechanisms and at the same time we had a products that made so much each sense. Right again we'll probably talk about it but it was a pure Improvement of something that already had a huge markets and probably the biggest Market 15

in hold. If I at the time which was basically collateralized lending on Aven and compounds and Morpho is literally like a improvements of that. And so this is where like hey like this thing is working, it has a huge Market, this is Ivan compound. But more for is here is I have like fresh new The think about things differently, but on top of that, they provide a product that is same risk. Parameters. Same liquidity. And has better rates so that

could not fail. And I mean, this is what they said to them. When investing, at least really, I think this is like, pretty much the story. It was the rounds last round of funding that we did, is mainly composed of American visas, which I think is worth mentioning because we struggled in Europe before being successful in the u.s. like the story somehow had more.

Or fit with the US visas like European business was like, we're probably, you know, maybe not as, as well as from the does the American ones, but I just thought it was interesting to see how of a gap that was between the reaction in the u.s. versus in Europe. So, yeah, I'd probably something. I don't know, some sort of fits, it is, I don't really explain it to be on it. Cool. So we've talked a bit about the

setting. Let's dig into the protocol maybe before we kind of get into the weeds in a nutshell. You already said that. Basically, it's a protocol that centers around lending and borrowing and it strictly improves on compound and Ava why these are 40 claim and so can you talk about what the protocol does in a nutshell?

Yeah, absolutely. So Morphers The Landing protocol so basically, you'll Annenberg crypto assets on mofo the same way you would do. And I have a compound order, whatever Landing protocol of a collateralized lending protocol bag system in D5. So basically, when you're Landing, there is a bar that comes that put some collateral to work and borrow your money, and it's a very low risk low rewards profile, because every loan that is taken, is Cured by

some collateral. So in case the collateral cannot be backing the fully the loan, then the liquidation happened. And so in every case, the lender should, if equations are working, well, be able to have some sort of risk free. Yeah, yells. So in terms of product, this is what it is. And now, what's different from Ivan compound is, actually that mofo is built on top of a van compound. So if you have compound, you have an instant Morpho called more for compounds.

That is working on top of contact. Same thing for a be, there is other protocol and there is more for every protocol that is built on top of morph have a. And basically, why is that? So it's because morph is going to optimize our way and it's going to optimize Combi. So, the question is, what do we have to optimize?

And if you go to our website or to camp on website, if you look at the rates you you quickly, Is that you have a huge spread between the landing and the borrowing rates, like 1% to land or 3% to borrow. Okay. Basically, the reason why that spread is is because those protocols the weather work. Deeply needs to have a ton of either liquidity in them that is not put to work and that is

going to induce this bread. So it's let's say Capital inefficiency, we can dig into that baby if But without getting into the details that have, you know, this is Matt realized by a spreads which more for is going to optimize by just taking the mid right. For example, and say, hey instead of landing at one, using more farther, you'll be lending it to. And instead of borrowing a free, you'll be buying at two or more far away.

So that's the overall concept. You get better rates on Avedon, more fun, more flavor than a V and you preserve all the, the risk parameters that you had an IV. So you get the same. Cultural factors and and sort of this sort of things and you get access to the same liquidity, which is like billions of dollars on eBay. How do you manage to actually get the apy down from the borrow AP wire from compounding up from the Lend apy from compound.

Yes, that's a good question. So in order to understand that we have to explain how the mechanism Works in a vase. So basically don't have a or compound basically lets head a pool because they're working. Very, very similarly, you have basically many lenders or it's applying to the same pool of capital and you have very few bars and those powers are paying three and those lenders are earning one.

And the reason why that is is because the numerous land I'll going to share the earnings generated by the few borrows, the three is going to divide it into multiple ones, given across all the put. So yields generated by Burrows

is diluted across all the book. It says, the reason why more for is more Capital. Efficient is based basically saying, hey, your are lending producer, you are borrowing from from other, for example, you're learning from IV, when basically, you could be lending and borrowing at to, like, I'm I mean, the concept is simple, like, I'm landing at 2%, someone's. He really could take my my load my deposit for 2% of a boring API. And this is what more for does more for is building.

A peer-to-peer matching engine that is built on top of the landing pool that enables Landing pool users to be much product here. Whenever there is an opportunity to increase their rate, either A lender or to decrease the rates in there are Barra, so it's a small Improvement it represents. Basically, what it means is instead Of having a diluted share of the capital that is put to work.

They get older Capital that is put to work which results in an increase of like plus 0.5 + 1 % EP Y, which is reasonable in this market conditions, to be honest, how people dealt with the spread before more followers, were there any other Solutions or like other attempts to try to reduce this spread? I mean, you guys are doing it by matching 40's and lenders directly in a sort of peer-to-peer way.

Are there other approaches that one can can Implement here to have a better efficiency of capital when doing lending? Yeah, absolutely. There's many different ways that could work. We went through a very specific implementation before Morpho. One of, the reason why nobody went for something, I would say more for similar is because actually this spreads was hidden by liquidity mining. So As of contacts into certain 20 21, 22 lending.

Protocols spend a lot of money Distributing tokens to their users and you had a 1%, you know, USD, see if you are your three percent barring a peony Rose to see, but on each side of the market would get distributed to percent in which case you'll get a much better. If you are in this spread, I would say virtually or artificially is disappearing.

And probably the reason why no one came Umm, you know, for a solution like more for before is because there were doubtful about the fact that we was was ever going to stop a day or not. And and we really started innovation of mofo by betting that you know rewards I wouldn't we're not going to stand like forever, right? This is basically Protocols are losing money and meeting rewards so they could not do that forever which they stopped pretty much the day.

We will not we launched more for so so that would be one of Reasons why, second reason, why would probably be the complexity of it. It's not so easy to do obviously, but does not mean like the one would have ever done it especially if we manage to do it, to do it, but I said those are the two biggest fraction to actually make it. Okay, so I kind of, I want to talk about how it works on a nitty-gritty level, before I go to like the economics of it. Does it work for you? Boy.

Absolutely fantastic. So let's talk about the matching engine. So basically say, I want to post a position to lend some Capital. What do I do? Do I post a message or do I already? I mean, do I have to pay gas for my transaction? Yes. Absolutely. So the matching engine is fully And so, basically more for is a smart contract, it's completely unchanged and it's a smart contract plugged on top of RV or compounds.

Where users instead of interacting with Ava directly and using the supplied borrow withdrawal repay functions of the problem is, it would be using the supply border with Israel, repay functions of more flow. And then more for is going to, let's say as a lender, let's have the very first person to land on Awful. I'm going to deposit 100 die. I'm going to be put in the list or any kind of data structure and my liquidity is going to be

put on the pool. So I'm yielding at 1% which is the apy of the port and there is no country party to match me. So basically, like there is there was no other way, just more full puts you into the Parlor, but you are in the list. And, and now bar comes in. And when the bar, It comes in is going to say hey I want to borrow.

What's a deposit some he's as collateral and is going to borrow 100. I and both ways going to look into this data structure so let's say it's a cute to simplify and say okay the first member of that Q is posting liquidity on our way. Let's withdraw this liquidity from a v in order to give it directly to the borrow and this is how, you know, broadly, the matching engine works. Okay, so when I post something to the queue, it's immediately

matched against our compound. And if there's a counterparty within Morpho, I am matched against the counterparty. And basically, the over collateralization of the lending pool on our compound that kind of results in the, in the healed. Being split several ways, between different lenders, goes to the soul lender, that is now match peer-to-peer EPS that kind of a good summary. Yes, I think it's a nice way to think about it.

Yes. How do you stop people from submitting, lots of small orders that the borrower will then have to pay gas for matching? Yes, that's an excellent question. And that's actually the reason why you can do for a first-in first-out model as I was describing and actually you have different ways you can. Solve the problem one way would be.

Okay, let's just do a pool inside of pool, and this way, you don't need any q and is just, you know, a pool with a higher utilization of the capital, and so, but that works. But at the same time for different reasons, it's not optimal in terms of capital efficiency. So the Q does not work. Because basically, someone can, as you mentioned, Supply One sense, like 1,000 times. And basically DDOS the the matching engine. So you have to come up with different ideas.

One of the most simple one and this is the one that we started with is basically to sort of part of the list. So in the blockchain environment, you have a limited complexity that you have available in order to do operations. Otherwise gas would basically explode. And so we came up with what we call, Semi sorting lists web server The list, we're basically

it's trivial. We just have a hip, the basically, a data structure that is able to get us, the biggest users across like the top ten and then the rest is a fearful. So, basically, when they Loop into the matching engine, I'll get to, you know, if I'm borrowing, I'll be much first with the biggest lender second with the second. Biggest lender, etc, etc. So I'm sure that I'm going to get liquidity out. Out of it.

And I won't be DDOS. And then I, when I go into the fearful, and so this is kind of, you know, the simplest implementation and that's a, you know, solve the specification of the problem that we were given in the first place. And this is the one we decided to to implement. This is other more complex and interesting way to solve the problem that we've been working on as well. Okay, so basically larger lenders at lower rates, are prioritized I understand correctly.

And then basically my question kind of that follows from that, if they're later, comes a better lender borrower, to the to Morpho, is everything else, reshuffled? No, it is not in the current implementation of more food is not. So, basically, if you get matched, no one can match. You, even though the proposed, a better rate, like something actually, in more for, you can't really prepare the raid. There is one period of Pure joy for everybody. But you can, you know, this is a

limit of the design, right? It would be better, of course, if everybody was able to, you know, get more competitive about their rates and every time I re-propose something, that is better, everything gets reshuffled, such that the market is more efficient, but the limits here. And the reason why we decided not to go for this kind of solution is simply gas cause it's like doing it on layer 1.

Maybe it's doable on other chainsaw related to like Like, there's a strain or or, you know, seek a saying or this kind of things. But on layer 1, it's very hard to, you know, come up with a I would say constant time algorithm that they're all those kind of matching computer pure. So that was probably the reason why we we decided not to have this reshuffling mechanism, even though it's a, it's a good

Improvement to have. Obviously, if you don't take gas goes into consideration, When you blend in a traditional like, Javier compound, your liquidity is being posted up to, and it's basically collateralizing all of the loans that that are that are being taken out by borers. As you said earlier, there is so much more liquidity that is covering, so its capital in the efficient, but that means that as a, as a borrower, I can come

in and out of that market. And and and I can sort of always be borrowing assets across this pool of collateral. So as a lender, if I'm matched with a borer and now that borer wants to take their collateral out, how is my loan now being collateralized knowing that it's just like peer-to-peer thing rather than boring against this massive pool of collateral.

Yeah, that's an excellent question and that's probably the first Cornerstone to the The more for protocol and how all this mechanism, you know, unwrapped. So I'm going to attempt this as simply as possible. Please, you know, feel free to ask me, intermediate questions here if you need it. But basically, let's get the intuition for an example first. So, if we come back to this example, where Alice was providing 100 died and Bob providing 1e in order to borrow 100,000 mofo.

Basically, What's Happening Here? Is that Alice her 100 die is going to get in. Into the pockets of Bob and Bob can basically, you know, since the, the old oak electron is much prettier Bob can just, you know, turn the Hafiz is machine go offline and do whatever you want with the 100. I, and at this point in time, let's say, Alice is alone. There is no die like more food as access to know die. So how could she be, you know, able to withdraw and and this is what more of a Souls is like,

how do you have 100%? So the efficiency without, you know, while staying liquid. And so what happens here when Alice is going to click, the withdraw button is the following. So Alice triggers the, which will function and more for is going first to unmatch Alice. And Bob say okay, I listen Bob are not even are not match anymore because Alice is about to Israel. So more for these to reconnect, Bob with someone and Bob is going to be reconnected with the The pool itself.

So what's happening here is that mofo is going to take a loan of 100 died on the bull, with the east of Bob and give that 100 die to Alice such that Alice can withdraw at any time. So basically, yes, we have 100% Capital efficiency, there is no die, but since the borrow that is taking on the die, has put some collateral. Then, this collateral can be To the actually boring on compounds and and match the position such that Alice can withdraw at any time.

I hope that was clear. I can go into, you know, different explanations of that if necessary. So basically, then what's happening is that compound or Ave is acting as a backup mechanism in. So, you fall back to you fall, back to compounder Ave rates. If there is no lender, So if there's no, yeah, there's no lender to back your position. Exactly. Yeah. I think it's interesting. And maybe I did not mention sufficiently.

Clearly in the beginning is important to mention that mournful not always offers the pure pure pure, which is in the middle. It's offers the pure pure pure, if a match is found from the borrower and the lender side and if comfortably accountability leaves or is there is no counterparty available, then there is a full back to the underlying pool. So basically, in terms of Acts. It's a landing protocol. That provides the same respirators, the same liquidity, and at least the same rates as

are they right? Worst case scenario, you get the other yields from a borrower or from A lender perspective and in average you'll be much peer-to-peer and enjoy a better rate. So if you look at oven compound, the reason why the borrow and lend apis are different from one. Another is to ensure there is sufficient exit the quiddity, right?

Because basically the user experience, if you want to withdraw your funds from a pool and you can't because it's still borrowed and you can't fool three payment unless it's unless the loan is underwater, you can't withdraw your funds and basically what will happen, then There's that the raids are just until it is economically unviable to kind of keep paying the interest on those loans and so on but it's a bad situation for the lender because you're under the impression that in

principle you can exit at any time. And that's why that's why the rates are so different because basically they have to make the poor bigger. So that basically, in like 99.5 percent of cases, everyone who wants to Exit can exit, the put asthma for your kind of piggybacking off of that mechanism.

So basically you're using the Ava and compound exit liquidity and kind of take the most lucrative deals, the land and borrowed years of large of large lenders and borrowers because those are prioritized of large lenders, and kind of skim that off the top. Yes, so I assume you guys are done contact with carbon compound. How do they feel about this? Yes, I think it's an excellent question and this is a question I get asked all the time is. I mean, this is true, that's more for the way.

It's design is taking volume from a VA and, and from Compound on the borrowing and the landing site and more for is, you know, it's a bit of a weird relationship because it's a bit competitive in the sense that we're taking market shares, but on the other ends more for is, you know, Printing, you raised. I mean rights that are not have sufficient, like actual efficiency that is enabled him to defy rates that were not

possible before. And so, this is interesting because basically we're unlocking you use cases, news usage. We're basically lenders, would not come at 1%, but they would come at too and thanks to more for their now coming. And, and I have a, is getting the, a little bit of a share of that. That through the full-back borrowing volume or the

full-back lending room. And if you look at compound, for example, I don't know if that's still the case, but at least for many months, this year more for was the biggest bar of compound. And that's very interesting because actually compound does not have so many organic berries. When you look at this, the the data of compound most borrowers and compound, which is the most important thing for compound because they bring the money in is actually artificial Burrows,

farming. W most of the time, not always, but most of the time. And so more for actually, proved to be the biggest bar to the biggest money bringer to the, to the compound protocol. So, you know, I I don't want to hide the fact that more face competitive. It is to some extent, but it's also growing the pie for everybody. And I think like Roberts from from compounds and and standing from from IV got this right? And, you know, I had the chance to talk to Robert's like to DM

him. About this a few times. And I think, you know, he and he and Stanny Express sometimes as themselves about it very briefly, but I think this is the right way to think about it. I hope that was clear as a as an explanation. Yeah, that's clear. Do you have any actual data about how many of the users your vampire, talking away from compound and oven? How many you are actually organically bringing to the table? I never fetch the data, but I should definitely. I think that's interesting.

And I think, you know, the market would decide in the ends and in any case morph is inevitable. So we'll have to do with it anyway, whatever the result is, He's kind of glossed over the fact that in matching borrow us, to lend us directly, you're also taking rewards from the port, so basically you not only are you taking share but you're also making the rewards on the poor smaller than they otherwise would be right? Yes. Maybe you can add a little bit of reflection on that is users.

So first mouthful, if a user is put on the boot, if no counterpart is matched. Then the user is put down the pool and is earning rewards more for is not taking any cuts on that and it's just giving it back to the user. And so, so muffled just give the comparative to the, to the lender, or the borrower that did not find a match. If the user is matched, then the user is out of compound and

experiencing a better rate. Better native rate like in Native you know in the East for example and in which case the lender or the borrower is actually removed from the pool. So there's more Rewards Remaining for the rest of the book. I don't know if that's clear. Well yes but the it that they're removed from the poor because 100% of the money they're lending is borrowed. So basically if that were to be, I mean I mean this is I don't think this computes what you mean?

No, I think says there is a bar coming. So, and extracting A lender, or the opposite from the pool. In which case those users that were previously earning rewards are not earning Rewards. Boards anymore and my father are not earning the country words there are much credit. I totally understand that part. But so basically to me, the question, is the borrower that comes in a new? What that borrow otherwise have gone to our or compound or what they have just refrained from taking a loan.

So basically, if they had refrained from taking a loan, I totally get your line of argument. But basically I'm skeptical that people who actually come to Morpho, wouldn't otherwise have defaulted to going to our Ave or compound. Oh yeah, I think like you're

right. Like it depends on the use case like there's some places where you only want to add yourself with to borrow if the rates is lower and in some cases where you would have gone anyway to have a because like whatever the race you want to borrow and in which case you go to Morphine which case this is the vampire set of things but there is a not vampire set of things where you can only offer to borrow at 1% or You just have a use case at 1% in which case you come to two

more full. And there is the fullback of that if there is no match, that is found or only a part of the match that is found that is for biking to to have a for the bar inside. Sure. Absolutely. If your price that you're price, I told I totally get that. Let's, let's talk about the preferential treatment of larger lenders, right? So basically on compound and Ava, everyone kind of gets the same Rewards In proportion to how much money they put up

whereas for, for more fo ways. I met first because of, you know, gasps efficiencies because everything is unchain, it's and it's not, it's not a pool mechanism. What happens to small lenders? Is it even, is it even feasible or attractive for them to actually come to Morpho? Yes, that's an excellent question.

So maybe first something that I want to end the line is that it's a difficult like it's a it's a different of the mechanism that we had to sort users is because we have we were so constraints about a serum that we had to sort about of the YouTube. But, you know, ideally, we would not want any previous trip, preferential treatment on the size of the notes. Now, this is solved by having

small lenders. Regrouping together in a single smart contracts which happens usually like usually you know, end users are not interacting as well as are interacting with protocols that are themselves. Interacting with more for, it means in which case they had can have like you know bigger size and have more chances to be much all together. So that's one thing. And yeah, I don't want to teach too much about what we're doing but like the problem is sort of

a okay? And what happens if someone On from this larger, this pool of people who kind of just got together to kind of co-invest in Morpho, what happens if one of them wants out, how do you get them out? Oh yeah. Basically one lender. So to the eyes of Morpho, this V is just a normal user and so they can withdraw our share of like a mofo, you can withdraw our share of what you have. So okay, let's get to work shall withdraw. Yes. Okay, quit that's super good. When you guys take a borrow

position on Ave or compound. Like you mentioned earlier that you were one of the largest borders on compound, you're earning compound. Like comp rewards for that. Can you talk a little bit about what those tokens are used for? And I think more broadly, I'd like to understand the token on mix of Morpho because as a Morpho user, you're also earning more more for tokens. And so, what's the interplay here? R between that and you know, broader token Onyx and how they work.

Yeah, I think we're very like minimalist in terms of talking design and that what we want to achieve visit again like we really want to, you know, every proposal that we're going to make on the Dow to have even evolution of the token is is going to be very minimalist. And we want that. Every step that we take makes sense is actually useful for the protocol and its users. So coming back to your question, is the comp tokens are all redistributed to compound a to

the motherfucker. Company users. So if I'm landing and my position somehow, you know, abstractly is ended up on the pool. Then I'm running those rewards and morph is going to account for those and is going to give them back to you. So there is no cut or whatsoever that is taken by more for like this is not the idea so that's one thing that this is the second thing about the morph targets that on top of that, whether your match whether you're not match, your always

get more for targets. It to you to your lender and borrower positions and those are kinds are not transferable for the moment, please. And basically, the idea here and the motivation is not, you know, to increase the apy. I'm a firm non-believer on yield powered by Garden sockets. However, it's your to decentralize the protocol. Like in my opinion, it makes sense to have daos and protocols governed by Investors contributors and users.

Like it's in my opinion, a good equilibrium to have the three of those that can have a say in the governance and the long term. So that was important to us to, you know, kick starts in some way, some sort of liquidity mining program as it is done on Morpho. And there is also this good effect of bootstrapping rights in the very you know, the first millions that we had I think more for now is almost at half a

billion. The difference millions that we had was like 100% of it. Not I 100% bit like maybe 99% of it was analyzed. Like we interpreted it as liquidity, Manning right. Which is not the case. Now is like because we had Fair volumes were able to, you know, discuss more Integrations. And I think this is the way talk and should be used. I want to talk about the governance in a little bit of more. Vo Dao. I have one last question for the protocol, sorry, to kind of dig deep here.

So obviously a cool part of a landing, protocols is liquidation. So if a position is underwater and the borrower is matched with a lender, typically, you could anyone can kind of liquidate that position and and take a cut off of the cholesterol. So I mean I assume I think it's exactly the same unlawful but obviously sometimes it goes

wrong. So basically sometimes there's I mean there's still some risk involved so sometimes prices crash too fast or no one actually liquid AIDS because gas costs are too high or something and on compound and other. Obviously this is a communal has risk because basically this is just unrepaid debt from from the poor. So basically this Ross gets redistributed to all lenders.

What happens on more for if a if there's a liquidation failure, it does the person who's matched with the person with the borrower that has that mishap happen actually, you know, to they end up empty-handed. Yeah, that's, that's an excellent question. So, we often say pure pure matching because it helps conceptualize the mechanism of For more fo but in mofo actually you never matched with a single control party. It's just the state.

It's like I'm in a peer-to-peer and hence States or I'm not in a peer-to-peer Annette States and so there is it feels like, okay there is one country party which I'm bearing the risk of, but this is not the case. Like the way it works is like when you have your money that is put in the pool, then you bear the risk of bad depth. Under the /. Okay, so if Aventura some bad habits, you're also interesting about it is your position is match peer-to-peer you have

shared loss. So first, something that I want to mention is that you have the same cultural factors the same articles Etc as on a v. So there is no specific parameter that would, you know. But yeah, I think that's important to mention. But now if we put in the scenario where for some reason, Reason Liquidators or not. I would liquidate then the loss is shares or call all more for users. So it's not specific to one counterparty but it's a smaller subsets as the other protocol.

Is that designs of the question? Yeah. That answers the question perfectly. So kind of it's like a gated community within the within the, within the other. Okay. Yeah, no I think I understand that. I think this also solves a question that I had on the regulatory side, Because basically, the reason why protocols, like carbon compound, a huge largely unregulated. This because you're always just deal with a smart contract.

Whereas, if you have a dark counterparty this kind of this kind of preferential treatment usually goes away in most jurisdictions. So kind of actually matching people peer-to-peer also comes with legal downsides? Yes absolutely. And I think this is why you know to the really Eight to talk about Landing protocol and and the prefer talking about, you know, liquidity pores or, you know, you don't lend your supply liquidity or you deposit

liquidity. But yeah, here it's a pure pure States but at the same time I want people to understand. So I say pure pure matching but but yeah, that's it's clearly a mutual estate. Yeah. I'd like to jump to using the product because I, you know, you're like yesterday I You know, looked at my Instagram app and I was like, oh hey my Ave positions are not yet on Morpho and and maybe I should just move them over there and benefit from

better better rates. So, one question I had was when you're using more fo are like when you say that you use this phrasing of like enhanced like an enhanced position where your you basically like you know, more forward. I feel it's sort of like this Progressive enhancement of like a Ending pool to a peer-to-peer but you always fall back as a user. Is it made obvious that you're

lending. Position is either matched on Morpho or you've Fallen back to compound is that like clear to the user and also the rate that you're getting? Yes it's a it's a good question. I think it's hard to have a good user experience with such a complex you know can is am, I would say, but basically I'm compound And I have a you have those sea targets that are basically not so useful, except

for user experience. This is no technical interest in having a see talking or I tuck and she's just a representation of something. Yes. When you have a tokens you you see the token yields like in your pot, for your, you know, how much it's worse and it's, you know, a very user friendly Behavior. Unlawful not all positions are treated equally and because of the, you don't have like the acid. 20, for example, you could have in some World, them sort of an FTE that we did.

Think that, that was an even worse, user experience having an FD and that people might throw it out, you know, not knowing what it was. So we're like, okay, maybe that's not a good way to go. And so, basically, this is a work, the front end has to do. So when you go to instead of, for example, is a do it extremely well, you did tell you

like what is your average? And if you go to morph was like interfaces with as well, the one developed by muscle-ups the one developed by mutative team like we have many, many different front-ends and usually what they're going to do is going to say, Hey, you have 100 interior appear, 100 in pool. Okay. So it's like Alf Alf. So we're going to make an average of your All of your rates and such that to use. You're just not feel the complex

care that doesn't make sense. So your position can be spread out. Yeah so your position can be half or there. Could be What proportion of your presents first portion. Reposition that's backed by like a peer-to-peer learning more fo and the other would be backed by some some position on compound or exactly. Yeah. And it's the work of the front end to average that and make it similar such that you have an

average API. And why is it that there are like two separate like Morpho compound and more felawe? Why wouldn't you just be utilizing the liquidity in both of those pools and sort of finding ways to optimize like, so basically, like finding the better rate depending on the assets, you're boring against for the user and sort of just, you know, adding the ability to add any sort of liquidity, pool underlying, like, one more photo interface or Tracked.

I think two reasons. The first one is complexity. Many, many, protocols have tried, you know, aggregating letting protocols and the mostly all have fails to some extent. And probably, the reason why is because the not every protocol share the same risk, and they're not the same, the sense that they take different collateral factors approaches. So, it's easier for the landing side of things.

You can say, hey, like, We will select the pull with the more interesting API, but if you start on so aggregating borrow positions at the same time, then it becomes, you know, it's hard because you have to decide on risk is like, you have to decide, which collateral Factor, I'm going to use. Like, I'm going to use the clutch on factor of our way of compound or the most conservative of the to, and as soon as you say, I'm going to use the most conservative of the

two. You're not an improvement anymore, you just a different product. And so in terms of product decisions, Asian. It was, it was basically a product decision that I took was, okay. I want to be an improvement of something. I want to be able to, to improve something that I know for sure has a market. And so that's why we decided to separate in order to have like,

no trade-off. However, like this definitely room for, for you, no more complex mechanisms, where you could aggregate those different protocols in a more advanced way, I would say, Hmm. Okay, so this is like a lot of complexity and aggregating different liquidity pools that that doesn't exist. They would like, aggregating, you know, like if there's so many D Phi e like defy adex aggregators that and that think the problem has been like mostly solved. Yeah, definitely.

I think it's a matter of, you know, risk rewards rather than just rewards and so it's for that reason it's it's an additional Dimension and you have to take into account and aggregation process and then come The navi, we're not made to, to share the liquidity with a partner. So when you can borrow on the one, you come around the other.

So it's it's very hard to have this sort of aggregated to its visible, but it's complex so we thought like, as a first step, you know, our first protocol should be something fairly simple, and this is why the matching engine has a lot of room for improvement. This is why we're not aggregating, but maybe in the future we'll be able to release

more advanced versions. I totally understand where you're coming from and basically as a defy user you kind of you want to be very specific about which protocols you're fine with. So basically at least you'd actually have to disclose to the user which protocols you kind of mix by default and have to have have them, allow them to opt out of that and so on. So I actually do think that especially since everything is on Shane, this is probably too much overhead. Head for not that much reward.

Yeah, definitely. I think this room for, you know, actual defy middlewares like, you know, you're in finance, full finances, Etc. Try. Actually, you know, makes at least the landing side of things and makes different strategies or rebalance and stuff like that. But this is like a different user kind. We really wanted to be as low level as possible, not just, you know, as close to A Primitive as we could be. And yeah. Pretty. And you also you also get natural rebalancing anyways, right?

So basically, it's not like no one's making the markets as I mean, there's tons of what's out there. They're kind of tried to get the years to commensurate numbers. Yeah, exactly. And actually, maybe one last thing to mention about that topic. Bizarre things. Interesting is rates are not so well, Arbitrage, and the reason why is they're not arbitrary set because it's not because butterflies Eeyore. But have not been coded but have been coded.

It's just that they don't have the same appreciation of risk on every single protocol. And that, yeah, you have a premium in like, you know, the reputation of a protocol Etc. And this is like, so complex to factor in a smart contract, obviously. What's the talk about the integration? So we already talked about instead app that was announced like last year. And what's cool about that is if you have like an Ave position, you you essentially don't have to unwind that position.

You can just have it be refinanced by Morpho. I haven't done that yet but I think I'm I think I'm gonna hit the button on thats pretty soon. But yeah. What other Integrations do you have to improve the usability? The and sort of like people's ability to use Morpho, I think we have a bunch like, we all talking to, you know, you have to kind of Integrations like protocol Integrations and no more data and analytics integration.

So, we're talking to a bunch of websites to get more for in approximately everywhere and you have a lot of funds as well. Integrating with more for and doing their complex quad stuff like a hedging and And and stuff like that. But we have as well, protocols, like V table, coin or genius dollars table coin that are using their collateral and the put their collateral to work on the more for protocol.

They say, hey, like we want better yelled for our stable con users or saving rate or whatever we are going to use, we're going to use this. And so yes, we have like, for example, D5 H that can help you, you know, head your Should systematically. When you're managing units of the three positions, we have spoon that I was mentioning a bit before which enables you to diversify your D5 portfolio. We really have a bunch of those and many coming in the pipeline

as well. But, you know, to be fair and I think that's a good ending nodes as well. Is that I feel like there is a ceiling to that gross, as well as like. Okay, we're like, I think we're top three Landing protocol at the moment with like like 500 million or close to 500 million in deposits on this area.

But I do feel like, you know, those are just different equations, 4, d 5 things that are often powered by defy Dawkins. And I feel like there's like of, you know, actual real world connected use case in all this. And I think that's going to be a challenge for us to reconnect, somehow more food to those real usage. You know, take the fight to the next level. Quiz. So, let's kind of shift gears a little bit and talk about the Morpho business model.

How do you guys make money, you know, other than raising money from American Reese's? That's, that's a good way. But of course, joking here. Some overlaps is, is a software development company making money by doing contributions to Dao. And so, ideally like the idea, you know, way of making money for us is basically proposing things to the mall for Dow that are going to, you know, be proved hopefully and that we are paid by the Dow to produce This research and enhance the

protocol the same way. Ivy companies is doing it somewhere. PG Labs is doing it for our way. For example, that raises the question of how more for makes money and The answer is mofo in, its current form is able to take a cut on the Improvement that is made from a v or from compounds. So it's basically you making one percent apy on an avid 11.5 on the mofo of it. Then more for is able to take let's say 20% of that Improvement and taking 0.4 percent of the volume that is matched.

So it's just a kind of the Movement. There is nothing like that is actually lost. And this is theoretical, so it's implemented but it's not turned on. So currently the protocol is not making money. So, how I mean, basically, if it's just a fee that's turned on, how do you guard yourselves against me? Just, you know, taking your code and fucking it and kind of lowering that 2.1%. And how do you make sure this there's extra structure?

Value in the protocol itself in the user base and this doesn't actually end in a race to the bottom. Yeah, that's a an exam question that I think every decide contributor should reason about in some way or another. So you have different ways to make this happen. One obvious way is to have a be USL license, which is the case of a very free company for Indians have be free. This is not the case of more formal for gtn copyleft license.

So you can you can forget, if If you wish to do it and basically, the reason why I think we wanted to go that route is we believe in as system grow more and more complex, we believe in network effects, you know, being able to retain users. Even if it's at the cost of like a 0.1%.

He and the reason why that is especially true for complex systems, is that security and You know, the trust in the Dow and the contributors themselves can be valuable for users, like, okay, there is a brand behind it and when you look at lending rates, it's actually interesting to see that for example, of is capturing a ton of the lending volume even though they're not offering you know as beneficial rewards as as compound for example and some underlies it I'm not saying this is what's

happening but I'm just saying that someone that I is it as basically the network effect of a were people. Trust more, Avid the brand and everything. And so you have, you know, quantitative questions here is that? How much does that represent in practice and how much like this network effect is going to

retain value? And how how big the secret could be Etc. But I think, you know, in the end we have not built something that is yet to revolutionize the world and it's this that is legitimate in really extracting, a lot of other To wit, I think the current thinking is for us, yes live, thanks to fundraising not turning on a fee because there is legal or so legal. No considerations on that and work as much as possible to build something that has, you

know, even greater traction. And where it's actually worth taking a great attraction and also create a network effect. So I think we're not, we remove thinking about, you know, designing things that you know, where I belong. To get sufficient traction. It's that we should legitimate to turn on a fee. I want you to propose to turn on the fee but I think that's not even the case at the moment. I hope it answers. I went a bit far but I hope it

answers the question. I don't need answers the question so I actually I also see the stickiness of defy applications. I think it's, it's really difficult topic. So what actually makes something sticky. Clearly, it's not just the best price or the best security. Artie. It's kind of like it's user Behavior question, and it's not 100% clear to me. What? Exactly, actually entails the stickiness.

Yeah, I think there's a lot of know, it all comes back to trust at some point, which is a bit weird, but that's how it is. And I do think the example of compound and IVs is a good example. Like I literally talking to users, I literally had many calls with people saying, hey, I'm never going to put a penny on compounds and I'm like, okay. I mean company has been here for a long time, but, and in, you know, it's the network effect here is, is, is really playing a

role. I think it is is Major in terms of, you know, how to retain users. And also, there are some products well, by Design because you have more volume. Your products is working better. It's just the case of curve, in that case, So tell us about the roadmap and what's coming for more fo. I know that a lot of this is governed through governance, but what are you most excited about? Yes.

I think like, you know, everything that will will be decided would be decided through governance and will be and will be voting excetera when it comes to more for labs and the research that we're doing on Landing in general, I would say like we've been thinking a lot about what makes sense, what

does not make sense? Then sin in the centralized landing and I'm going to disappoint you a little bit but as of now we prefer, you know, keeping things close to the chest for the moment in the sense that we really like to release things that we are, very sure that they're very neat and clean at least scientifically so we'd rather, you know, not tease

anything for six months. And then really is a big paper that we've been working on for more than a year rather than Can you know try to figure out road maps, Etc, because it's a constantly evolving space. I'm quite doubtful about road maps in general. I think you know we are a team of 20 a bit more than 20 were mostly researchers. So what we're doing is research and what I can said oh is that

so far? We have not something sufficiently cleans and and that we're convinced self, 222 teased or really significant the public and also I Have the team of researchers that that I really, you know, firmly against the fact that we should tease this kind of things because for them it's science and that we should not be teasing science and I respect that a lot. So I comply to the standards of the company and I just don't teach. Okay. Then maybe let me kind of zoom

out a bit. What are your personal hopes for the ecosystem for 2023? So my personal hopes are rationalizing. So a lot more defy, think 2022, and the events, you know, are grim. And you know, I obviously I don't wish this would have happens to a lot of people that suffered from it, but on the other hands it's it has good aspects in the sense that we are rationalizing. The mechanisms were designing. I think a lot of time has been lost.

In talking design, what we should have focused on mechanisms designed, for example, that's a personal take, not the to take of more flowers with I think like we've seen mechanisms that are impressively relying on target incentives, that inerrancy do not create value. And I'm hoping that 2023 is going to once and for all, you know, at least largely diminish, the impact of those.

There's this mechanisms in in this space and how, you know, How talents are sometimes, you know, working on those designs, what they could be working on more, some some, you know, more interesting. Primitives, very simple. So I think this is my first hope. I also think that this is the perfect cure for building. I'm very excited about what's going on. Like, I took two teams and that all building something very

exciting. Like, I'm really excited to see like the the different announcements on Twitter that are going to be made in the next few months. And I would say, My Last Hope is that we regulations. Do not say you know, too fast decisions on the topic of defy. I think one very important key thing for 2023 is that they take the stance of, you know, regulating apps rather than

protocols. It's a very deep, you know, I think this is the way they should behave and if it is the don't again personal take that you did not. I feel like this could endanger largely the system. And finally, I hope for more institutional, you know, starting playing around defy. This does not like a good start for 2023 because like with the FX heavens and everything people do not feel, you know, inclined to get into D Phi again and it's

soon. But I'm hoping that with, you know, cleaner mechanisms no protocols. That I have been sufficient, trust like em, especially thinking of the nurses. Say, for example, the safe now.

So A is I think once we have, you know, sufficiently battle-tested Primitives like this or you wanna swap, we can start thinking about onboarding, like the next order of magnitude of Futures. And I'm really hoping one of those companies, you know, go big and some on somebody's to actually connect us to the rest of the world. And yeah I have a lot of Hope in this industry leaders and I hope that more for will also you know be part of those very soon which is it is in a greater way to do so.

Much cooler. Thank you so much for coming on for that was very interesting. Yeah, definitely I think probably one of the most interesting and you know in depth first guest I've ever been in. So is a pleasure sharing that moment with you guys. Hmm thanks Paul. Thank you for joining us on this week's episode. We release new episodes every week. You can find And subscribe to the show on iTunes Spotify, YouTube SoundCloud or wherever

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You can follow us on Twitter and please leave us a review on iTunes helps people find the show and we're always happy to read them. Well thanks so much and we look forward to being back next week. You can follow us on Twitter and please leave us a review on iTunes helps people find the show and we're always happy to read them. Well thanks so much and we look forward to being back next week.

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