Aave’s token traded into green territory today as two institutional papers reviewed the protocol favorably this month.
On one hand, Zach Pandl, the Head of Research at Grayscale, shared his thoughts about whether Aave could become a household name. On the other hand, the Bank of Canada, in what was its first formal central bank study of the protocol, called DeFi lending with proper governance “operationally viable.”
AAVE currently trades around $93.4, after peaking near $96.5 during the day. The token has spent most of 2026 under pressure, with other first-quarter governance crises that resulted in the departures of BGD Labs and Aave Chan Initiative (ACI).
Aave has reversed a negative price trend today. Source: CoinMarketCapGrayscale sees Aave becoming a household name
Grayscale’s sentiments about Aave have been fairly public for over a year. In October 2024, Grayscale launched the Grayscale Aave Trust, with its Head of Product and Research, Rayhaneh Sharif-Askary, describing the protocol as having “the potential to revolutionize traditional finance.”
Additionally, in February 2026, Grayscale filed with the SEC to convert its trust into a spot-traded ETF targeting an NYSE Arca listing. This move was similar to the same paths they took with Bitcoin and Ethereum, and would open AAVE exposure to a far wider base of regulated investors if it is approved.
Grayscale’s latest research post formalizes the investment thesis.
In its 2026 Digital Asset Outlook report, Grayscale had initially highlighted Aave as one of the primary beneficiaries of a DeFi acceleration it expects to happen through the year. It was a trend that, according to the outlook, it expects “core DeFi protocols to benefit, including lending platforms like AAVE.”
The post also argued that the protocol’s combination of TVL dominance, fee generation, institutional integrations, and regulatory clarity positions it not just as a DeFi leader but as a mainstream financial brand in the making.
With the protocol generating $141.8 million in revenue by 2025, and commanding up to 60% of the DeFi lending market by TVL, Aave’s fundamentals seem to be evidence of that theory.
Why is the Bank of Canada bullish on Aave?
The Bank of Canada’s DeFi Lending: Returns, Leverage and Liquidation Risk paper, written by Jonathan Chiu and Furkan Danisman, was released as something unusual: an in-depth central bank study of a DeFi protocol using transaction data.
According to the paper, protocol earnings were concentrated in just a few tokens, with WETH, USDT, and USDC driving approximately 83% of Aave’s total earnings.
Apparently, highly active and wealthy users making up approximately 2% of the platform were also involved in risky margin trading. Because these traders leverage heavily to improve their trades, they get liquidated twice as fast as everyday traders, which in turn causes major liquidation waves during market downturns.
It is not unusual for borrowers to face between 10 to 30% in lost collateral when liquidations occur, with the ten largest liquidation waves accounting for over 80% of total liquidated volume.
Nonetheless, the paper acknowledged that despite these risks and the platform’s issues with capital efficiency, liquidation risk, and systemic fragility, they believe that nothing is wrong with the core technology and that it only needs better rules and management to effectively handle such extreme events.
It must be noted, however, that the Bank of Canada’s paper studied V3, not V4, which launched on Ethereum on March 30, 2026.
The transition to V4 has singlehandedly become the most contentious issue in Aave’s recent history. If Aave manages to solidify its governance and V4 delivers, then Grayscale’s household name thesis might hold.
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