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    Home»Ethereum»The Next Era Of Crypto Belongs To Decentralized Markets
    Ethereum

    The Next Era Of Crypto Belongs To Decentralized Markets

    KryptonewsBy KryptonewsOctober 26, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Opinion by: Rachel Lin, co-founder and CEO at SynFutures

    DeFi has come a long way since the boom-and-bust cycle of 2020’s DeFi Summer. Much of the surge in the early days was fueled by experimentation, hype and unsustainably high incentives. 

    Five years on, DeFi’s foundations look very different. The past year’s experimentation is a quiet consolidation phase, setting the stage. 2025 may be remembered as the year when DeFi surpassed centralized exchanges (CEXs).

    The bear market in 2023 and 2024 washed out many DeFi projects that lacked a product-market fit, and forced other DeFi platforms to mature, focusing on infrastructure and achieving real adoption.

    Decentralized exchanges evolved

    While Celsius and BlockFi’s collapse and FTX’s bankruptcy exposed weaknesses inherent in many centralized platforms, decentralized exchanges (DEXs) have sought to deliver similar speed and user experience, leveraging high-performance chains and building their own infrastructure.

    Just as importantly, as blockchain latency has improved, fully onchain order books have become viable, allowing DeFi protocols to start tackling prior pain points in capital and liquidity efficiency. 

    Moving beyond the pool-based models of early perpetual DEXs like GMX, new hybrid designs combine automated market makers (AMMs) with the order execution of orderbook exchanges, or support outright order books only, enabling far more efficient liquidity provisioning for traders by mitigating slippage and depth issues.

    DeFi captures market share

    From a numbers standpoint alone, Q2 saw the top 10 DEXs in the market facilitating $876 billion in spot trades (up 25% from the previous quarter). In contrast, CEXs saw their spot volumes decline 28% to $3.9 trillion, pushing the volume ratio between the two to a record low of 0.23 in Q2. 

    DeFi’s resurgence can be attributed to the growth of trading. Lending protocols, for instance, have eclipsed their centralized peers, recording a meteoric 959% jump in activity since the late-2022 bottom. Aave now holds enough deposits to rank among the 40 largest banks in the United States, a testament to the growing scale and credibility of DeFi. Meanwhile, Coinbase’s partnership with Morpho to launch Bitcoin-backed loans via cbBTC, routed directly through Morpho’s onchain infrastructure and liquidity, signals a broader shift toward DeFi-native infrastructure.

    Related: Aave DAO proposes $50M annual token buyback using DeFi revenues

    People clearly seem to prefer the transparency and automation of onchain lending after seeing a string of CeFi lenders go bust. Whether in terms of trading volume or credit provision, DeFi has established a commanding lead in growth that cannot be ignored.

    Regulation and renewed trust

    The flipside of DeFi’s growth story is that the broader crypto market is finally offering more regulatory clarity. Rather than pushing innovation offshore, this shift is encouraging leading DeFi protocols to engage with regulators and operate within clearer frameworks. Uniswap, for example, has taken a prominent role in advocating for sensible policy discussions that would legitimize DeFi’s transparency and self-custody.

    Coincidentally, users’ preference for onchain systems is especially apparent during moments of regulatory tension, like the SEC’s lawsuits against Binance and Coinbase, when traders quickly migrated to decentralized exchanges, with volumes surging 444% within hours of the announcements. The message was clear: When regulation tightens, activity doesn’t vanish. It simply evolves onchain.