Aave Launches v4 on Ethereum to Expand DeFi into Real-World Credit Markets

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Aave has launched v4 on Ethereum, marking a key step in real-world assets (RWA) news as the protocol expands DeFi into real-world credit markets. The upgrade allows separate lending markets to share liquidity pools, enabling borrowing and lending beyond crypto tokens. It also improves capital efficiency and development flexibility. The new version is live with limited markets and conservative settings, with future features to be decided via governance. The move comes after a DeFi exploit highlighted the need for stronger security and broader use cases.

Aave, one of the largest decentralized lending platforms, debuted its long-awaited v4 upgrade on Ethereum, aiming to push DeFi beyond crypto trading and into broader financial markets.

The upgrade has been in development for about two years and is designed to make it easier to use Aave for a wider range of lending and borrowing activities, including those tied to real-world assets.

The introduction follows months of internal debate over governance and value flow through the protocol. Disputes over interface fees, contributor roles and proposals to redirect product revenue to the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) have highlighted tensions between decentralization and coordination, even as the work progressed.

At a basic level, v4 changes how Aave organizes its markets. Instead of grouping everything together, the new system allows different types of lending markets to operate separately while still sharing the same pool of funds.

That means users could eventually borrow and lend against more than just crypto tokens.

For Aave Labs founder Stani Kulechov, the shift reflects a broader change in how decentralized finance is evolving. “Lending is based on trust… you need lending conditions that reflect market conditions,” he said in an interview with CoinDesk.

The upgrade is designed to better handle that complexity. By separating different market types while sharing liquidity, Aave aims to support everything from traditional crypto lending to more complex situations like institutional borrowing and real-world assets.

It also opens the door for others to build on top of the protocol more easily.

“It also means that other teams can come and build and expand that infrastructure,” Kulechov said.

Another goal is to make better use of the capital already in the system.

“There’s some technical improvements where the float … can be reinvested,” Kulechov said, referring to idle funds that can now be deployed more efficiently.

The new version went live with a limited set of markets and conservative settings. More features are likely to be added following governance decisions.

“DeFi is stronger than ever,” Kulechov said. “A lot of these opportunities will come from value outside of DeFi.

Read more: Aave labs proposes ‘Aave Will Win’ plan to send 100% of product revenue to DAO


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