Staking Ether strategies: The Ox, The Dog, The Tiger, The Frog

Staked ETH, liquid derivatives, it’s a whirlygig of smart contracts and big-brain blockchain jargon out there. Given this, I’ve clawed some time away from my other responsibilities as part of Bybit’s communications team to point to a few paths through the ETH staking wilderness.
But remember, anon, as the poet Antonio Machado said, “there is no path, paths are made by walking” — which is a fancy way of saying this isn’t financial advice and make sure you do your own research.
Let’s start with the first personality type and the type of ETH staking that might be appropriate:
The ox, archetypally, has a strong, dependable personality but can be stubborn and suspicious of new ideas. If that sounds like you, you may be interested in staking directly with Lido.
Lido Finance is not only the biggest liquid staking derivative (LSD) protocol but is now the biggest DeFi protocol in the market in terms of total value locked ($9.5 billion) and market cap. Lido takes your ETH and stakes it via a team of vetted validators, pooling the yield garnered, and distributing it to the validators, the DAO, and investors.
In return for providing ETH to Lido, the DAO issues “staked ETH” (stETH) tokens which are like receipts (or “liquid derivatives”) that can be redeemed for your original ETH plus the yield accrued. These tokens, along with those from other LSD protocols such as Rocket Pool and StakeWise, can be traded on the open market.
The risks include the fact that the smart contracts holding your ETH might have an undiscovered bug, the DAO might get hacked, or one or more of Lido’s validators might get penalized by Ethereum and have some of their stake removed. All the following strategies contain these risks plus more.
If that sounds like you, maybe look into auto-compounders. For example, adding liquidity to Curve Finance and then locking up the LP tokens.
When using Curve, I like to use Frax-based tokens as the two protocols clearly have the hots for one another and Frax pools often have the best rewards. I passed some of my ETH to Frax to stake and received their LSD called “Frax ETH” or frxETH.
It’s in Frax’s interest to maintain a highly liquid market for frxETH so they run an LP pool on Curve, which offers up to 5.5% APY on top of the fact that your frxETH is also earning a similar yield. Nice.
But some of this APY is paid out in CRV tokens. No shade, but I would rather have ETH, so I hopped on to Aladdin DAO’s Concentrator protocol and gave them my LP tokens, which is like a receipt for my share of the frxETH/ETH pool. They do some wizardry and return me 8% APY paid in the underlying assets. Nice.
Naturally, when mixing DeFi protocols into a screwy, money cake, the risks compound with the yield. Here, there are three protocols involved as opposed to one, which could mean the risk is cubed — but I’m no mathematician.
This is perhaps the most sophisticated strategy on the list and should be considered by experienced investors with a large amount of money on the line.
Essentially, the tiger can use a similar strategy to the dog, indeed, there are many LP pools and many compounders across the DeFi world so finding one that fits shouldn’t be an issue. The issue for tigers is how to hedge their risk.
After speaking to some of the big brains on the Bybit team, a few options contracts might be in order. The basic way would be to buy enough in-the-money put options to act as insurance in the event ETH takes a dive. This might be all that’s needed seeing as the risk of impermanent loss is low given stETH tends to maintain its peg (those wanting to hedge against a depeg event should check out Y2K protocol over on Arbitrum).
However, a more optimal strategy would be The Bear Call Spread as that will insure against depreciation but also return some profit in a sideways market. For more on that, you can check out our definitive options strategy guide.
The next strategy is quite popular in some sections of the crypto world. In terms of risk, it’s as about as safe as covering yourself in peanut butter and running at a horde of malicious chimpanzees.
It involves “looping” which refers to supplying an asset, borrowing against it, swapping the borrowed money for more of the original asset and repeating the process.
From my own research, I found a yield farm that will give you about 2% yield when you deposit wstETH (the same as stETH but with a harder peg) and allow you to borrow USDC against it for 3.5% interest.
You can then swap the USDC for more wstETH and repeat the process using a 75% loan-to-value ratio so you don’t get instantly liquidated. If you were to loop this process five times you will end up with and APY of over 13% on your wstETH, which itself is earning 5%.
Whatever your personality, it’s possible to find the strategy that works for you and while it might sound complicated if you have your own decentralized wallet or one on an exchange most of them can be enacted with just a few clicks. While some bearish types might decry the continuation of overly-ebullient risk-taking, I see the trend in LSDs as part of the birth of a new yield-bearing asset: ETH.
One day stETH might even rival the traditional bond market. After all, if governments can run trillion-dollar economies as essentially derivatives of their own bond market, what are a few validator nodes among crypto friends?
Disclaimer: Nothing herein shall be construed as investment advice or any offer or solicitation to offer or recommendation of any investment product
Originally published in Cointelegraph
Source: Bybit Blog | Four Strategies for Staking Ether (ETH)