A DeFi options platform using social logins and undercollateralized trading to draw in liquidity providers just launched, according to a June 15 announcement. The protocol, called “Synquote,” is capable of handling large trades with much less slippage than previous options platforms, the team claims.
According to the announcement, Synquote did over $25 million of notional volume in its beta period, which began on March 17. The largest trade during this period was for $1 million in notional volume, which was executed without any detectable slippage, developers told Cointelegraph.
In a conversation with Cointelegraph, Synquote founder Ahmed Attia explained the strategy the protocol uses to attract liquidity. First, it doesn’t use an automated market maker to determine prices. Instead, an off-chain, peer-to-peer request-for-quote protocol matches traders and market makers, helping to allow greater flexibility in terms of the types of orders that can be placed.
Second, the protocol allows liquidity providers to make undercollateralized trades. For example, they can issue or sell options with “as little USDC [USD Coin] as one-tenth of the underlying asset’s value if [they’re] selling a short-dated naked call.” Attia argued that allowing undercollateralized trades is the only way to attract large institutions to the DeFi space, stating:
“We launched a fully collateralized platform before, and we saw that activity was limited by the amount of size market makers were willing to trade on-chain with a fully collateralized [position]. So this is a huge improvement that unlocks the ability for them to trade with size and have capital efficiency on-chain.”
Social logins have also been implemented as part of the public launch, the Synquote founder stated. Traders can now log in using their Google credentials without needing to download a wallet or copy down seed words. This is possible because of the Web3Auth platform, a type of new wallet tech that allows for seedless wallets.
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In the past, some undercollateralized platforms have suffered liquidity crises during large swings in the market. For example, the Vires.Finance lending app on Waves suffered frozen withdrawals in April 2022, as its liquidation mechanism was unable to cope with the rapidly escalating fall of crypto prices during that time period. The app was later recapitalized through a “revival plan.”
Attia stated that the Synquote team is well aware of this risk and has implemented very conservative risk-management practices in order to help prevent such a crisis from occurring on Synquote.
“Our margin requirements are actually pretty conservative still,” he said. “We’ve done a lot of backtesting with historical data, and we’ve seen that even the biggest market moves […] even on the day FTX went bankrupt and the market was absolutely plummeting, even on those black swan days, the system is safe, with the liquidation system responding in an appropriate amount of time.”
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