Yield Farmers are Migrating to Polygon

Polygon offers a similar yield farming experience to Ethereum mainnet at a fraction of the cost. Key metrics show that DeFi power users are starting to migrate to the network.

Low-Cost DeFi on Polygon

High gas fees are pricing regular investors out of DeFi on Ethereum. As the price of ETH has risen, gas fees have also surged, casting doubts over the possibility of a second DeFi summer.

Ethereum’s popularity has helped drive gas prices to record highs even with organizations like Flashbots working to reduce blockchain congestion. Some users have turned to Binance Smart Chain, though that network has suffered from a variety of issues such as hacks and flash loan attacks.

In the search for low fees and fast transactions, many yield farmers have turned to Polygon, the Ethereum scaling solution that’s sometimes described as a “commit chain.” Polygon uses a Proof-of-Stake consensus algorithm, and transactions on the network cost fractions of a cent.

Source: Nansen

The growth in the number of daily active addresses has been accompanied by an impressive rise in the price of Polygon’s native token, MATIC. Over the last 30 days, the token price has increased by more than 300%, according to CoinGecko. The number of transactions on Polygon also surpassed Ethereum for the first time on May 2, with leading exchange Quickswap accounting for most of the volume.

According to Nansen, only 0.09% of Ethereum addresses have interacted with Polygon, which has meant there are bountiful yield farming opportunities for those who have started using the network. The chance to earn passive yields has increased as more protocols have launched on Polygon.

While apps like Quickswap are Polygon-native, interest in the Layer 1 scaling solution grew when established DeFi protocols set up versions of their apps on Polygon. Aave, Curve, and SushiSwap have all joined the ecosystem this year, with positive results.

Even after the launch of Aave v2 and a popular liquidity mining program on Ethereum, Aave’s Polygon market size has already reached $6 billion. To help the market grow, Polygon has distributed MATIC rewards for lenders and borrowers. The demand for low-cost DeFi, easy access to capital, and the MATIC rewards distributed to lenders and borrowers have all helped attract liquidity.

Source: Aave

Lenders can currently earn up to 18% lending USDT on Aave. Interestingly, users can also borrow USDT at a rate of 8% per year but earn 12.5% in MATIC rewards, resulting in a net gain.

Yield Farming on Polygon

DeFi users currently have several options for earning high yield on crypto assets on Polygon. The first possibility is to provide liquidity on Quickswap, the most popular exchange on Polygon. With low fees and gas prices, Quickswap’s volume is high and results in high commissions for liquidity providers (LPs). In addition, LPs can receive QUICK rewards on certain pools, further boosting APYs. These rewards currently range from 30% on stablecoin pairs to 200% when the trading pair includes QUICK. SushiSwap and Curve are also offering MATIC rewards on top of fees for their LPs.

Users can also choose to entrust their LP tokens (tokens received when providing liquidity to a trading pair) to yield aggregators like Yearn.Finance on Ethereum. These yield aggregators help reinvest profits in the same pools, boosting the returns of their users. Some platforms such as Adamant Finance have also launched their own governance token as a further incentive, driving APYs even higher. As a result, providing LP tokens for Sushi’s USDT/USDC pool is currently earning a 99% APY, including ADDY tokens.

Classic yield farms are back as well, the most popular so far being Polywhale. Users can stake their cryptocurrencies in Polywhale’s pools in exchange for its native token KRILL. When users deposit their crypto assets, a portion of their deposit is used to repurchase KRILL from the market. Users can currently earn up to 80% APY by staking MATIC, harvest the KRILL rewards, and deposit them in their own pool for up to 2,500% APY.

It’s important to note that such farms are highly experimental, and the price of tokens like KRILL can be extremely volatile. For many users, the mix of risk and huge returns recalls the summer of 2020 on Ethereum. If the excitement around DeFi yield farming returns this summer, it may well be on Polygon.

Source: Crypto Briefing

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