Not All Crypto Yield Is Created Equal

Not All Crypto Yield Is Created Equal

Not All Crypto Yield Is Created Equal

Opinion by: James Harris, group CEO of Tesseract

In an environment of tightening margins and heightened competition, yield is no longer optional. It has become a necessity.

This gold rush mentality obscures a critical truth defining the industry’s future: Not all yield is created equal. The market’s obsession with headline returns sets up institutions for catastrophic losses. 

On the surface, the industry is brimming with opportunity. Protocols advertise double-digit returns. Centralized platforms tout simple “yield” products. Marketplaces promise instant access to borrowers.

These disclosures are not nice-to-have nuances for serious institutions, but table stakes that mark the line between fiduciary responsibility and unacceptable exposure.

MiCA exposes the industry’s regulatory gap

Europe’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework has introduced a structural shift. For the first time, digital asset firms can obtain authorization to provide portfolio management and yield services, including decentralized finance strategies, across the EU’s single market.

This regulatory clarity matters because MiCA is more than a compliance box to tick; it represents the minimum threshold that institutions will demand. Yet the vast majority of yield providers in the crypto space operate without oversight, leaving institutions exposed to regulatory gaps that could prove costly.

The hidden costs of “set it and forget it”

The fundamental problem with most crypto yield products lies in their approach to risk management. Most self-serve platforms push critical decisions onto clients who often lack the expertise to evaluate what they are truly exposed to. These platforms expect treasuries and investors to choose which counterparties to lend to, which pools to enter or which strategies to trust — a tall order when boards, risk committees and regulators demand clear answers to basic questions about asset custody, counterparty exposure and risk management.

This model creates a dangerous illusion of simplicity. Behind user-friendly interfaces and attractive annual percentage yield (APY) displays lie complex webs of smart contract risk, counterparty credit exposure and liquidity constraints that most institutions cannot adequately assess. The result is that many institutions unknowingly take on exposures that would be unacceptable under traditional risk frameworks.

The alternative approach of comprehensive risk management, counterparty vetting and institutional-grade reporting requires significant operational infrastructure that most yield providers simply do not possess. This gap between market demand and operational capability explains why many crypto yield products fail to meet institutional standards despite aggressive marketing claims.

The APY illusion

One of the most dangerous misconceptions is that a higher advertised APY automatically indicates a superior product. Many providers lean into this dynamic, promoting double-digit returns that appear superior to more conservative alternatives. These headline numbers almost always conceal hidden layers of risk.

Related: Bringing Asia’s institutional yields to the onchain world 

Behind attractive rates often sit exposures to unproven decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, smart contracts that have not weathered market stress, token-based incentives that can vanish overnight and significant embedded leverage. These are not abstract risks; they represent the very factors that led to substantial losses in previous market cycles. Such undisclosed risks are unacceptable for institutions accountable to boards, regulators and shareholders.