$AAVE

🔥 A brief history of Aave 🔥

Stani Kulechov launched Aave in 2017 as ETHLend, one of the first lending applications based on the Ethereum blockchain. Rather than establishing direct contact between lenders and borrowers, Aave includes both parties via liquidity pools, diversifying possibilities, and automating the process. Aave offers borrowers not just traditional over-collateralised loans but also flash loans.

$BTC

Aave raised US$16.2 million in an initial coin offering (ICO) to fund the development of a decentralised peer-to-peer lending network. When they shifted to a liquidity pool approach, they renamed it Aave. In 2020, Aave introduced the Aave Protocol, an open-source, non-custodial liquidity protocol that allows users to earn interest on deposits and borrow assets. That year, Aave became the second DeFi protocol to reach US$1 billion in total value locked (TVL), reaching that milestone on 16 August 2020. The platform’s TVL increased to as much as US$19.4 billion on 26 October 2021. As of mid-May 2022, Aave logged more than US$8 billion in TVL.

Aave makes an effort to address some of the most urgent challenges with conventional loan businesses. The project's principal purpose, like with other DeFi projects, is to transform centralised financial services into their decentralised alternatives. Banks would lend funds and earn interest in a typical loan situation. Even if they are lending your money, you will never have access to lucrative interest returns—everything changes in the Aave ecosystem. Anyone may lend their crypto to other users in a trustless and permissionless way. The interest you earn by lending your assets is sent straight into your network wallet. Therefore, Aave contributes to changing the peer-to-peer lending industry while spawning an entire DeFi sector with the same ambitions.

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