Bancor, a decentralized finance protocol often credited as the pioneer of the DeFi space, paused its impairment loss protection (ILP) function on Sunday, citing “hostile” market conditions.
In a blog post on Monday, the DeFi protocol noted that the ILP pause is a temporary measure to protect the protocol and the users. The blog post read:
When a user gives liquidity to a liquidity pool, the ratio of their deposited assets changes at a later moment, potentially leaving investors with more of the lower value token, this is known as impermanent loss.
Bancor's protocol-owned liquidity was used to fund ILP: the protocol staked its native token BNT in pools and used the collected fees to reimburse users for any temporary loss. The process effectively burnt excess BNT when generated trading fees are more than the cost of impermanent loss on a given stake.
The ILP function was first introduced in 2020 and was upgraded with more refinements with the launch of Bancor 3 in the second week of May this year. However, the recent market turmoil leading to a 70% decline from the top for most of the cryptocurrencies, had an adverse effect on the DeFi market as well, leading to several critical changes made by DeFi protocols.
While Bancor hopes the pause in the IRL would help the protocol take a breather, many in the crypto community were unhappy with the decision. Cobie, the host of crypto podcast Uponly Tv criticized Bancor for pausing the IRL when liquidity providers need it the most.
what is the point of impermanent loss protection if it just disappears when u most need it LOL pic.twitter.com/GAJyhr6Tib
Hasu, a research collaborator at web3 investment focused firm Paradigm dug a little depper into the impairment loss protection claims made
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