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Curve Finance Votes to Disperse $3M in Fees to Governance Token Holders

Curve Finance Votes to Disperse $3M in Fees to Governance Token Holders

Curve Finance Votes to Disperse $3M in Fees to Governance Token Holders

The community vote was an exercise in decentralized governance for a protocol not unfamiliar with meeting community demands.

The community vote was an exercise in decentralized governance for a protocol not unfamiliar with meeting community demands.

The community vote was an exercise in decentralized governance for a protocol not unfamiliar with meeting community demands.

AccessTimeIconNov 27, 2020, 7:45 PM
Updated Aug 19, 2021, 5:53 AM

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Curve Finance, a decentralized exchange, will distribute nearly $3 million in accrued fees to the platform’s governance token holders, following a community vote.

On Friday, a week-long voting period seeking to determine how “admin fees” were to be allocated closed in favor of token holders. Now, in three days, some $2,631,601.92 worth of fees – accrued before the vote opened – will head to community member coffers. 

The protocol will continue to disburse fees on a weekly basis following this initial payout, Curve CEO Michael Egorov told CoinDesk.

Curve’s recent vote could be seen as a successful exercise in distributed governance, where platform users are encouraged to participate by having skin in the game. The vote passed unanimously with 95 votes cast in favor, representing 49.75% of the entire eligible voting pool.

This point is all the more emphatic considering the confounding origins of Curve’s governance token. In August, an anonymous DeFi user preemptively deployed smart contracts for the decentralized autonomous corporation and token the team were building, without their knowledge or consent.

An exercise in decentralized governance

The Curve team adopted the front-run code due to intense community interest during the heyday of governance and liquidity token yield farming.

In order to vote, users must stake CRV tokens to the protocol’s voting contract which then supplies users with veCRV, creating a kind of voting escrow. Since September, veCRV holders have earned half of the 0.04% trading fee the protocol levies, with the other half going to liquidity providers. 

“The vote for this splitting already took place in the past, and the current vote activates the code to trustlessly distribute the fees now and in the future to veCRV token holders,” Egorov said. “While we've been writing and testing the code, the amount of fees accrued over 69 days, waiting for distribution, appeared to be $3 million.”

Curve is the sixth-largest DeFi protocol with approximately $1.3 billion worth of cryptocurrencies locked in its various smart contracts. Token trading has been flat since the governance vote passed, according to DeFi Pulse

UPDATE (11/29/20 - 17:30 UTC): Corrects Curve's TVL to approximately $1.3 billion, not $800 million. Curve CEO Michael Egorov says the earlier protocol valuation was based on incomplete information from DeFiPulse.

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