Disclosure: The opinions expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not represent the views of crypto.news’ editorial.
In the last five years, DeFi has transitioned from a niche idea to a functional, albeit still unstable, alternative to sections of traditional finance. By November 2025, its total value locked remains in the $100–$120 billion range, sufficient to indicate activity, but insufficient for true transformation.
Summary
- DeFi’s TVL has declined from its peak in 2021, primarily because early “yields” were synthetic — fueled by token emissions rather than genuine economic activity — resulting in a collapse once inflows decreased.
- The market reset has shifted attention toward real yield, linked to actual production such as Bitcoin mining; tokenized hashrate now connects physical energy-backed computation with on-chain finance.
- Looking forward, PoW-based, production-driven models seem more robust for DeFi’s next phase, while Ethereum’s PoS yields risk stagnation as its base layer becomes more conservative.
Additionally, that figure represents less than half of DeFi’s previous peak in 2021 and early 2022. During that time, TVL exceeded $250 billion, a result of a straightforward mechanism in full swing: mint tokens, label them as rewards, and present the outcome as sustainable yield. The model appeared promising. Token values rose, early adopters gained merely from being first, and TVL continued to expand. In essence, most protocols provided effortless returns, prompting users to jump at the chance.
So, what went wrong? Why does today’s TVL stand at roughly half its prior level? The root of the issue lies in the nature of that yield, which, in economic terms, was never genuine.
DeFi’s synthetic phase collapsed, and real yield took its place
In its heyday, DeFi appeared unstoppable. However, much of that growth hinged on synthetic yield — returns generated by token incentives rather than actual economic activity. Emission-driven systems are inherently fragile because token rewards retain value only as long as new capital keeps pouring in. When inflows diminish, token values drop, yields collapse, and users start to depart.
That’s precisely what occurred. Speculative assets waned in attraction, one-hit-wonder projects faded, liquidity shrank, and overall activity fell alongside the broader crypto downturn. This market purification led to a structural reset that had long been overdue.
Simultaneously, a new form of yield emerged — real yield. Unlike synthetic returns, real yield is contingent on actual demand and reflects direct participation: transaction fees, protocol revenue, or productive computation instead of token emissions.
This brings us to Bitcoin (BTC) and its network, one of the few networks where yield is genuinely linked to real production. Mining translates energy into verifiable computational work, defining the network’s economic output. But how can users access this production layer without managing mining infrastructure themselves? That’s where tokenized hashrate plays a role.
Tokenized hashrate links physical energy and digital capital
Essentially, hashrate tokenization transforms computing power into tradable digital assets. Rather than constructing infrastructure, signing power contracts, or overseeing equipment, users possess tokens granting them a share of the actual work completed by a facility. Consequently, they gain access to Bitcoin’s industrial layer without needing to mine themselves.
The scale of Bitcoin mining underscores the relevance of this model today. In Texas alone, crypto-mining facilities exceeded 2,000 megawatts of registered power capacity in 2023, and that figure surged to around 3,600 megawatts within a year. These numbers indicate industrial-level energy demand, demonstrating that mining has transcended its previous “side activity” status.
At this juncture, mining functions as a yield-generating industrial sector — capital-intensive, energy-consuming, and foundational to Bitcoin’s economic output. This is where tokenized hashrate becomes critically important. It bridges two previously disconnected elements — physical production and digital finance.
However, real production alone does not ensure stability, even amid its rapid advancement today. If the network’s architecture cannot sustain this yield over time, the ecosystem risks being trapped in the same expansion-and-collapse cycle that characterized the previous downturn.
Proof-of-work vs proof-of-stake as competing yield architectures
To maintain yield over time, architecture matters, and for Bitcoin, that foundation is proof-of-work. PoW secures the network through energy usage and computation, anchoring yield to a real-world input. This is crucial for production-based models — energy is converted into work, and that work yields measurable results. However, focusing solely on Bitcoin would miss the broader picture.
Ethereum (ETH) is also noteworthy, particularly because it has provided protocol-native returns for a longer period. Since its shift to proof-of-stake, ETH holders have garnered yield by locking assets and taking part in network validation. This model is capital-efficient, less resource-demanding, and doesn’t necessitate physical infrastructure. Nonetheless, this efficiency exposes its limitations.
As a network leans on a mature, low-risk validation mechanism, the opportunities for significant innovation narrow. This trend is evident with Ethereum. Even Vitalik Buterin has stated that Ethereum’s base layer should adopt a more conservative stance, indicating a slower, more incremental development cycle. When architecture halts its evolution, the yield it supports often stagnates.
In contrast, PoW is advancing in the opposite direction. Value creation is tied to real production, meaning that the more the sector expands, the more visible and verifiable that output becomes. For these reasons, tokenized hashrate and other PoW-linked instruments are, in my view, better positioned for the next phase. Their returns are based on tangible work being performed, rendering them significantly more resilient.
What’s next for the DeFi cycle
Currently, the last cycle, grounded in synthetic yield, has illustrated the risks of relying on leverage for returns. The collapse has paved the way for production-based models, with tokenized hashrate emerging as one of its most concrete outcomes. I believe this is where DeFi’s future lies — in real yield, supported by tangible output and infrastructure.
Conversely, Ethereum’s system is stagnating. It may remain efficient, but if innovation at the base layer slows, those returns risk becoming static or, worse, precarious. We’ve already witnessed the consequences when yield detaches from real value. Thus, DeFi cannot afford to repeat that error.

