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“How do tokens reflect returns”… Uniswap redraws the new landscape of DeFi governance with “UNIfication”
Exilist (Exilist) recently conducted a research report focusing on the lack of intrinsic value in governance tokens within DeFi and the fundamental policy shift of Uniswap (Uniswap). The study defines Uniswap’s “UNIfication” proposal as an event that goes beyond mere token burn events, fundamentally restructuring the protocol’s profit model and capital distribution structure.
So far, governance tokens have struggled to provide a practical narrative beyond “voting rights.” Although Uniswap has generated revenue and expanded its ecosystem, criticisms persist that UNI holders perceive minimal value. In response, the December 2025 “UNIfication” governance vote was overwhelmingly approved with 125,342,017 UNI in favor and 742 against. The core of the proposal includes: ▲ Immediate burn of 100 million UNI from the treasury ▲ Activation of the fee switch, linking revenue to UNI’s market repurchase and burn.
These measures go beyond simple circulation reduction, aiming to transform UNI into a “deflationary asset linked to usage” by automatically reflecting protocol revenue into the token. Burning is now directly associated with revenue, creating a structure where increased trading volume in Uniswap directly results in UNI burns. According to Exilist’s analysis, this becomes an experimental case exploring whether DeFi tokens can operate as “actual revenue and capital distribution models” rather than relying solely on “narratives.”
However, the fee switch policy faces a structural challenge of conflicting interests with liquidity providers (LPs). Under v2 standards, this design would allow the protocol to earn approximately 0.05% of swap fees instead of the original LPs, potentially reducing LP earnings and triggering a chain reaction of decreased trading volume and reduced funding for burns. To address this paradoxical situation, Uniswap has simultaneously advanced three supplementary mechanisms.
First, through the “Protocol Fee Discount Auction (PFDA),” the protocol sells fee exemption rights via auction and reinvests the proceeds into UNI burns. This introduces additional MEV revenue and trading efficiency into the protocol. Second, it promotes the expansion of on-chain aggregators based on v4 hooks, shifting towards a routing-centric structure to control overall trading flow rather than directly providing liquidity. Third, it announced that the revenue from Uniswap’s own chain, “Unichain,” will also be included in this burn mechanism, interpreted as an attempt to diversify sources of token value capture.
Improving the legal enforcement structure is also a core part of this transformation. Many DeFi projects have failed to link revenue to token value due to concerns about being classified as securities. Uniswap, however, established an operational entity under the Wyoming DUNA framework, which Exilist analyzes not merely as regulatory avoidance but as a structured effort to clarify responsibilities and procedures.
Experts have commented that through UNIfication, Uniswap demonstrates that the future value of DeFi tokens does not depend on “creating revenue” itself but on “how revenue is handled.” The market now demands something beyond governance functions, with a practical standard emerging: actual cash flow and capital distribution strategies must be embedded within the token.
Ultimately, Uniswap is reshaping the DeFi competitive landscape based on a measurable standard of “capital distribution capability,” rather than the reputation of the token. Blue-chip DeFi protocols capable of generating revenue will face the same question: “What does the token represent?” Regarding this question, Exilist clearly states: the era of hype is over; now is the time to link revenue and operational structure with token assets.