A History Of Cryptocurrency Liquid Staking

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Liquid staking is among the most transformative blockchain innovations in recent history, due to how it has helped unlock new potential for on-chain liquidity, decentralization, and yield generation.

Staked tokens are left locked up and illiquid with traditional staking mechanisms, creating massive liquidity constraints. With liquid staking, however, users can stake their tokens while retaining their liquidity, bolstering that blockchain’s decentralization and its DeFi ecosystem.

As more proof-of-stake blockchains have proliferated throughout the cryptocurrency ecosystem, a variety of liquid staking protocols have launched, helping solve for some of traditional staking’s limitations and to expand cryptocurrency use cases.

In this article, we’ll explore the history and evolution of liquid staking, key innovations that have shaped its development, and how it has become a vital component in the cryptocurrency landscape.

The Origins Of Liquid Staking

As proof-of-stake blockchains began to gain favor over proof-of-work due to sustainability and scalability concerns, the introduction of staking mechanisms became commonplace with blockchains, wherein staked tokens worked to help secure the network and ensure sufficient decentralization.

With this method, though, staked tokens typically couldn’t be used for other financial activities, creating a massive capital inefficiency, as generally a large portion of a network’s tokens end up getting staked. Ethereum, for example, has nearly 30% of its circulating supply staked, while Avalanche has 54% of its total supply staked, and Solana’s staking ratio sits at 65%.

Liquid staking emerged as a solution to help unlock this trapped liquidity. Once a user stakes tokens using a liquid staking protocol, they’ll receive a derivative token (or liquid staking token) that represents the value of their staked assets. While their original tokens work to help secure the operations of that blockchain, these derivative tokens can be used for a variety of DeFi purposes, such as trading or collateral for loans.

In 2020, the implementation of ETH 2.0 allowed users to stake their tokens in preparation for the network’s transition to proof of stake. But doing so meant they couldn’t unstake until ETH’s transition to a proof-of-stake network was fully complete (which didn’t happen until Sept. 2022).

Lido was among the earliest liquid staking platforms, launching in 2020 amid this transition to proof-of-stake to help users retain their liquidity.

Users who stake using Lido receive a derivative token, stETH, which represents their staked ETH, plus any earned rewards. These stETH tokens can then be used within DeFi protocols like Aave and Compound, or for a variety of yield farming strategies, allowing users to earn yield from both staking, and from any activities conducted with their derivative tokens.

Since launching on ETH, Lido has also launched liquid staking on a variety of blockchains including Polygon, Optimism, Arbitrum, and BNB Smart Chain.

The Rise Of Liquid Staking Across Blockchains

As Lido gained popularity and quickly emerged as the preeminent liquid staking platform, the concept began to spread to other blockchains, with each protocol adapting to that blockchain’s unique technical and economic environments.

Solana

Marinade Finance, which launched in 2021, was the earliest liquid staking protocol released on Solana. Similar to Lido, users of Marinade receive a derivative token, mSOL, in exchange for their SOL, and can use mSOL across Solana’s DeFi ecosystem. Marinade’s liquid staking strategy involves automatically distributing stakes across dozens of validators, which helps reduce risks associated with a validator going offline, or changing their commission fees.

Other liquid staking platforms on Solana include Jito, SolBlaze, and marginfi.

Polkadot

Acala, also launched in 2021, was the first liquid staking protocol available on the Polkadot network and is significant for how it pioneered liquid staking for Polkadot’s multichain architecture and helped unlock liquidity for its ecosystem.

Polkadot relies on a series of “parachains” which are application-specific blockchains connected to the main network, meaning any liquid staking token needs to be compatible with the network’s entire suite of parachains.

When staking using Acala, users receive LDOT in return, which can then be utilized across the entire cross-chain network of the Polkadot ecosystem. For Polkadot, which has around 60% of its supply staked, liquid staking has helped unlock a significant amount of liquidity and helped facilitate the groundwork for a cross-chain DeFi ecosystem.

Other liquid staking platforms on Polkadot include Parallel Finance and Bifrost.

Avalanche

Similar to other blockchains, the launch of BENQI on Avalanche in 2021 was a massive step toward unlocking liquidity and improving the usability of AVAX’s DeFi ecosystem. When users stake via BENQI, they receive sAVAX in return, a derivative token that was integrated into a variety of lending, borrowing, and yield-farming platforms early into its launch.

Users of sAVAX can yield farm on Pangolin and take out loans on Aave, while still earning rewards on their initial staked tokens.

Other liquid staking protocols on Avalanche include Ankr and Balancer.

The Arrival Of Liquid Staking On Bitcoin

While liquid staking has gained traction on proof-of-stake networks, Bitcoin’s proof-of-work architecture has largely prevented a similar boom native to the Bitcoin ecosystem. The Bitcoin network’s lack of smart contract compatibility, slow consensus mechanism, and low data availability, make it far from ideal to be used for complex transactions like liquid staking or DeFi applications.

But the emergence of liquid staking platforms, such as Lorenzo Protocol, has the potential to help unlock bitcoin’s massive liquidity, while also paving the way for a bitcoin-native DeFi ecosystem.

Currently, almost all of the liquidity that comprises Bitcoin’s $1 trillion-plus market cap is locked on Bitcoin’s main network, either in exchange balances or self-custody wallets. And it’s locked there due to Bitcoin’s inherent limitations.

But that liquidity represents a massive potential opportunity for bitcoin. What if that capital could be utilized across the DeFi ecosystem?

Using platforms like Lorenzo, the potential of that locked capital can finally be realized. Holders of bitcoin now have the ability to stake their bitcoin, similar to how they would any proof-of-stake token, and receive a derivative token in exchange, which can then be used across a variety of proof-of-stake networks.

With Lorenzo, users can request their bitcoin be staked, after which it gets sent to a verified financial institution, which serves as the staking agent and completes the staking execution. Upon confirmation that the BTC has been staked, users will then receive an equivalent amount of value in derivative tokens, stBTC. These tokens are smart-contract compatible and can be used for DeFi purposes across a variety of EVM-compatible blockchains.

Through facilitating the ability to make their bitcoin liquidity interoperable across multiple blockchains, liquid staking on Bitcoin represents a significant advancement in the evolution of Bitcoin into a multi-chain, DeFi-compatible asset.

What’s Next?

Liquid staking has emerged as a solution to address the liquidity constraints of traditional staking methods, enabling stakers to maintain liquidity while securing the network. With its rise across major proof-of-stake blockchains, liquid staking has significantly expanded DeFi use cases, enhanced decentralization, and has helped enable a more efficient DeFi ecosystem.

As its potential extends to bitcoin, expect a new range of financial applications for bitcoin that will be enabled by the unlocking of the asset’s massive liquidity.

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