DeFi lending protocols have grown into a multi-billion-dollar sector attracting serious investor attention. A detailed breakdown by crypto analyst Tanaka has placed four major platforms under review.
The analysis covers Aave, Sky, Morpho, and Compound, examining bad debt records, revenue models, and structural resilience.
The findings offer a measured view of which platforms are genuinely built to last through market cycles.
The DeFi lending market reached $54 billion in total value locked by mid-2025. Aave alone holds over $40 billion of that figure across more than 14 chains.
The protocol currently commands approximately 62% of the lending market. That level of dominance would be considered monopolistic within traditional finance circles.
Tanaka’s analysis centers on one core question before allocating capital. “The only question I ask before allocating to any lending protocol: is bad debt capacity smaller than the safety module?” the analyst posted.
Without a clear answer, all other metrics become secondary. LTV ratios, utilization curves, and governance tokens are noise without that baseline being met first.
Aave processed over $1 trillion in loans with only around $2 million in lifetime bad debt. On February 4, 2025, the protocol liquidated $210 million in a single day without generating new bad debt.
Its Umbrella staking module keeps stakers as the first-loss buffer before depositors are ever touched. Stakers take on that risk voluntarily at over 10% APY.
Aave recorded its highest quarterly earnings in Q4 2025, reaching $22.6 million. Tanaka noted that some L2 deployments, including zkSync, Soneium, and Celo, are running at a net loss.
A December 2025 governance dispute between Aave Labs and the DAO over revenue diversion also drew attention. The fundamentals remained intact, but governance trust was temporarily strained.
Sky earned recognition for recording zero lifetime bad debt since 2019. The protocol weathered Terra, 3AC, FTX, and multiple ETH crashes without incurring losses.
Its Dutch auction liquidation model determines true market price rather than paying a flat bonus. The integration of real-world assets also gives Sky a revenue floor that does not disappear when crypto markets fall.
Morpho’s isolated market design stands out as its most differentiating structural feature. Each market on Morpho Blue operates as its own risk unit, independent of others.
A bad collateral event in one market cannot spread across the broader protocol. Tanaka described it as mechanism design that addresses the biggest historical failure mode in DeFi lending.
Cream Finance collapsed because one troubled asset contaminated its entire shared pool. Tanaka stated that scenario is “architecturally impossible on Morpho Blue.”
The protocol has undergone more than 25 audits from firms including OpenZeppelin, Spearbit, and Cantina. Yet its DAO remains unfunded, while $130 million in annualized fees flow through with nothing reaching the treasury.
Compound holds $65,710 in lifetime bad debt since launching in 2018. Single-base-asset markets and minimal moving parts keep its attack surface narrow.
Institutions seeking stability over yield optimization tend to favor that approach. However, rate competitiveness against Morpho is quietly eroding over time.
Venus, Iron Bank, and Cream each failed through the same mechanics. Shared pools, illiquid collateral, and no first-loss buffer produced cascading losses across all three.
Black Thursday in 2020 illustrated the same problem. ETH dropped 43% in hours, $5.4 million in DAI was auctioned for zero dollars, and Maker only survived by minting MKR as a last resort.
Tanaka’s final allocation view positions Sky and Aave as the most reliable options for capital deployment today. Morpho is treated as an asymmetric opportunity, with fee switch activation as the single catalyst that changes its long-term trajectory.
Compound remains the safest architectural option for conservative participants, though its competitive edge continues to narrow.
The post Which DeFi Lending Protocols Can Survive the Next Crash? Aave, Sky, Morpho, and Compound Reviewed appeared first on Blockonomi.

