In the ecosystem of lending protocols, what do active users really look like? By tracking the actual behavior of on-chain addresses, many interesting patterns can be uncovered.



Generally speaking, users can be divided into three groups: one is the frequent hedging arbitrageurs who focus on the spread between borrowing costs and returns, rapidly repaying loans and chasing every tiny interest difference; another is the long-term yield chasers who prefer to collateralize assets and then cycle operations to achieve compound growth; the third group consists of users who truly need liquidity—after collateralizing and borrowing, they withdraw directly to exchanges or use the funds for payments, rarely engaging in complex DeFi nested operations.

Interestingly, the latter two groups are actually the real backbone of protocol stability and cash flow. Especially the yield chasers, whose behavior patterns are most worth paying attention to. They typically maintain relatively high collateralization ratios, are less sensitive to fluctuations in borrowing rates, but have an almost obsessive focus on additional yields and potential airdrops. Thanks to their long-term locking, the protocol can sustain a stable total locked value and has a buffer to withstand market volatility.

The liquidity demand group, on the other hand, represents capital flows from the real world—they are the key to driving lending protocols into application layers and truly breaking out into mainstream adoption.

From this perspective, the governance focus of the protocol should be on meeting the needs of these two core user groups—optimizing the user experience of yield aggregation, and creating more convenient fiat on/off ramps—rather than blindly pursuing short-term data growth and attracting arbitrage capital. Truly understanding the composition of your users allows for a more accurate assessment of the protocol’s resilience in market fluctuations and its long-term development trajectory.
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MoonBoi42vip
· 14h ago
To be honest, I am the kind of person who keeps an eye on airdrop yields every day, haha. While arbitrageurs are busy grabbing profits, I just honestly lock my positions and wait for compound growth. Anyway, I have free time anyway. If the protocol really wants to last long, don’t just focus on new user data. It should take good care of us "die-hard fans." This analysis hits the point. Long-term holders are the real stable anchor. Really, only when fiat on-ramps are convenient can we truly go mainstream, not just talk about it on paper.
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SatsStackingvip
· 14h ago
To be honest, those arbitrage folks are just freeloading on the protocol liquidity. The ones truly supporting the ecosystem are still those "silly" compounding guys. There are so many airdrop hunters now, it feels like everyone is just waiting for that one moment. So the core is to retain users with genuine demand and not be blinded by short-term TVL. It's interesting; it seems many protocols still haven't figured out who their actual users are. The fiat on-ramp is indeed a pain point. Without a practical exit, there's no talk of ecosystem applications.
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StableGeniusDegenvip
· 15h ago
Arbitrageurs are just here to scalp profits; the true cornerstone is those yield hunters who hold on tightly and refuse to let go. That's right, the airdrop expectation is the real killer feature; this group can withstand any volatility. Flow users are the most genuine group, directly withdrawing funds and making decisions with money. Protocols still obsessively stacking TVL data will eventually cool off. Instead of attracting high-frequency traders, it's better to stabilize these two groups; long-term gains are the real hard truth.
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fren.ethvip
· 15h ago
Exactly right, arbitrageurs are just here to suck blood; those who truly support the protocol are the ones who hold on tightly and refuse to let go --- Profit chasers are the real parents, always locking in their positions, unafraid of any fluctuations, just waiting for airdrops --- This analysis is brilliant; finally someone said it out loud—most protocols are going in the wrong direction --- The part about liquidity demand really hit me; that’s the real need, not those complicated multi-layered operations --- Protocols should really take a good look at this, stop being blinded by short-term data --- High collateralization + waiting for airdrops—that’s the way to win passively. I am part of this group --- Honestly, users who can maintain stable TVL are the true gods; everyone else is just a bystander --- Why don’t any protocols understand this? Instead, they’re all frantically attracting arbitrage funds --- That fiat on-ramp is really crucial; unfortunately, most protocols are stuck there
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token_therapistvip
· 15h ago
Arbitrageurs are daily fleeceing, but the ones truly supporting the protocol are those long-term users waiting for airdrops—ironic, isn't it?
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