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Aggregators – Ash Egan – Medium

Aggregators – Ash Egan – Medium

This piece seeks to cover the emerging trend of “aggregators” within decentralized finance on Ethereum. First coined in 2017, DeFi has grown enormously since inception, unbundling the financial stack into an open, permissionless system. I will highlight the modular nature of the DeFi stack, and the role of aggregators.

In December 2017, MakerDAO launched Dai, a crypto-collateralized stablecoin built atop the Ethereum network. The Maker team has in many ways been the darling of DeFi, as Dai and Maker’s tooling have served as core building blocks for DeFi. Dai’s endured USD-peg as the price of Eth plummeted from $1400 to $80, encouraged trust and secured its role as the medium of exchange for DeFi.

A particularly interesting trend in DeFi is the shift to , the user facing products that are built atop decentralized infrastructure. Aggregators emphasize UX/UI improvements over the liquidity layer, whereas the liquidity layer is singularly focused on improving the core underlying functionality (lending, exchange, etc).

For framing, I’ve visualized the modular nature of DeFi below. The consensus layer (ie Ethereum) serves as the digital economy powering the two layers that sit atop: the liquidity layer, and the application layer. Worth noting is the open, permissionless nature of the the liquidity layer compared to closed web2 APIs. As you will see, the aforementioned ‘aggregators’ are within the application layer, since they are the last piece of the puzzle in delivering crypto-network enabled products and services to end users. This open, unbundled financial stack is being accelerated by DeFi tooling, which will be covered later in the post.

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Published at Sun, 29 Sep 2019 23:29:48 +0000

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