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Blog

Why Staking Rewards Are Becoming a Protocol Liability

An analysis of how inflationary staking models create unsustainable economic feedback loops, diluting holders and masking a lack of real protocol utility, with data from major L1s and L2s.

introduction
THE LIABILITY SHIFT

Introduction

The economic model of native token staking is transitioning from a core incentive to a systemic risk for major protocols.

Staking is a capital sink that extracts value from the protocol's productive economy. The inflationary token emissions required to pay stakers dilute existing holders and create perpetual sell pressure, a dynamic seen in the sustained underperformance of high-APY L1 tokens versus the broader market.

Protocols compete with themselves by offering staking yields that often exceed the real yield generated from protocol fees. This creates a structural deficit where the cost of security (staking rewards) outpaces the protocol's actual revenue, forcing reliance on token inflation.

Evidence: The annualized staking rewards for networks like Ethereum, Solana, and Avalanche represent a multi-billion dollar liability. For example, Ethereum's ~$10B in annualized staking rewards far exceeds its ~$2B in annualized protocol fee revenue, highlighting the subsidy.

thesis-statement
THE LIABILITY SHIFT

The Core Thesis

Staking's native yield is transitioning from a protocol asset to a structural liability, forcing a fundamental redesign of economic security.

Staking rewards are a subsidy. They are a direct cost to the protocol, paid in inflationary tokens or fee diversion, to bootstrap security. This creates a permanent economic drag on the network's value, as security becomes a recurring expense rather than a capital asset.

The subsidy fails at scale. As total value secured (TVS) grows, the required yield to attract capital becomes a larger, unsustainable drain. This creates a security-subsidy death spiral where higher inflation or fees are needed to pay for the security of a less valuable token.

Proof-of-Stake (PoS) is a capital market. Protocols like Ethereum and Solana compete with TradFi yields and DeFi farming. The required risk-adjusted return for stakers now dictates tokenomics, not the other way around. This inverts the security model.

Evidence: Ethereum's post-merge net issuance is near zero, but its $100B+ staked value requires ~$3B in annual ETH rewards. This is a direct transfer from the protocol to validators, a cost that must be justified by fee revenue or future appreciation.

STAKING LIABILITY ANALYSIS

The Dilution Dashboard: Major Protocol Staking Economics

A comparison of inflation-driven staking models, showing how token emissions dilute non-stakers and create long-term sell pressure.

Economic Metric / FeatureLido Finance (LDO)Ethereum (ETH)Solana (SOL)Avalanche (AVAX)

Annual Staking Inflation Rate

4.5%

0.4%

5.7%

8.7%

Staking APR (Protocol Issuance)

3.2%

3.0%

6.9%

8.5%

Staked Supply % of Circulating

31%

27%

68%

60%

Annual Protocol Token Dilution

1.4%

0.1%

3.9%

5.2%

Treasury Sell-Side Pressure

Real Yield from Fees (Protocol Share)

0.1%

0.7%

0.05%

0.2%

Inflation-Funded Security Budget

Vesting Schedule for Team/Investors

2025

N/A

2030

2026

deep-dive
THE INCENTIVE MISMATCH

The Vicious Cycle: From Incentive to Liability

Staking rewards, once a core growth mechanism, now create unsustainable sell pressure and misaligned governance.

Inflationary rewards create perpetual sell pressure. Staking emissions are a direct dilution of existing tokenholders. This forces validators and delegators to sell a portion of their rewards to cover operational costs, creating a constant downward force on token price that offsets yield.

Yield farming distorts governance incentives. Protocols like Lido and Rocket Pool attract capital seeking yield, not governance participation. This separates economic interest from protocol stewardship, concentrating voting power with passive, yield-focused entities.

The cycle becomes self-defeating. To maintain Total Value Locked (TVL), protocols increase emissions. This accelerates dilution and sell pressure, requiring even higher emissions to attract new capital, trapping the protocol in a Ponzi-like feedback loop.

Evidence: Ethereum's transition to proof-of-stake deliberately minimized new issuance to ~0.5% annually, a direct rejection of high-inflation models. Layer 1s with 10%+ annual emissions consistently underperform their diluted market cap growth.

counter-argument
THE LIABILITY SHIFT

The Steelman: But We Need Security & Participation!

Staking rewards, once a core incentive, are now creating unsustainable economic drag and misaligned security models.

Inflationary rewards create sell pressure. Protocol-native token emissions dilute existing holders and create a constant overhang on price, turning stakers into perpetual sellers to capture yield.

Security becomes a yield-seeking commodity. Validators prioritize the highest-paying chain, creating mercenary capital that abandons networks during stress, as seen in the Solana and Avalanche subnets.

Proof-of-Stake security is economically inefficient. The capital locked for staking is a massive opportunity cost; protocols like EigenLayer and Babylon are monetizing this idle security.

Evidence: Ethereum's ~$100B staked secures ~$400B in DeFi TVL, a 4x security premium that stakers now seek to leverage elsewhere for additional yield.

case-study
STAKING LIABILITIES

Case Studies: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

Staking rewards, once a primary growth lever, are now exposing critical protocol vulnerabilities in security, economics, and decentralization.

01

The Problem: Liquid Staking's Centralization Trap

Protocols like Lido and Rocket Pool create a trade-off between capital efficiency and systemic risk. The dominant LST becomes a single point of failure for consensus and governance.

  • Lido commands ~30% of Ethereum stake, risking the 33% liveness threshold.
  • Creates governance capture vectors where a few entities control massive voting blocs.
  • Yield compression from LST dominance disincentivizes solo staking, weakening network resilience.
~30%
ETH Stake
33%
Attack Threshold
02

The Problem: Inflationary Death Spiral

High staking rewards funded by token inflation create a Ponzi-like economic model that collapses when new capital stops flowing in. This plagued early Proof-of-Stake chains.

  • New token issuance to pay stakers leads to double-digit inflation, diluting all holders.
  • Creates sell pressure from validators covering operational costs, suppressing price.
  • Results in a negative feedback loop: lower price โ†’ higher inflation to maintain USD-denominated yield โ†’ further sell pressure.
>20%
Typical Inflation
Negative
Real Yield
03

The Problem: Validator Overload & MEV Extraction

Maximizing staking rewards forces validators into complex, risky MEV strategies, centralizing block production around sophisticated players and jeopardizing chain stability.

  • Leads to proposer-builder separation (PBS) and dominance by entities like Flashbots.
  • Causes chain re-orgs and latency games as validators chase extra profit.
  • Erodes user trust through front-running and sandwich attacks, making the base layer hostile.
$1B+
Annual MEV
Centralized
Block Building
04

The Solution: Restaking & Shared Security

Protocols like EigenLayer and Babylon transform staked capital from a passive yield asset into active, productive security. This creates sustainable yield from external sources.

  • Rehypothecates staked ETH/Tokens to secure AVSs (Actively Validated Services) like rollups and oracles.
  • Decouples yield from native inflation, sourcing rewards from service fees.
  • Introduces new slashing conditions, creating a risk marketplace for stakers.
$15B+
TVL Restaked
External
Yield Source
05

The Solution: Real Yield & Fee Switching

Mature protocols like Uniswap and GMX are shifting from token emissions to distributing protocol-generated fees to stakers/lockers, creating sustainable, non-inflationary rewards.

  • Uniswap Governance enabled fee switches, allowing token holders to capture a share of swap fees.
  • GMX's GLP stakers earn real yield from trading fees and market making.
  • Aligns staker incentives with long-term protocol health and usage growth.
100%
Fee-Based
Sustainable
Model
06

The Solution: Enshrined PBS & Proposer Commitments

Core protocol upgrades, like Ethereum's PBS roadmap and EIP-7514, aim to structurally limit validator advantage and MEV centralization, protecting the chain's credibly neutral base layer.

  • Enshrined PBS separates block building from proposing, preventing validator-level MEV extraction.
  • Rate limiting validator growth (EIP-7514) slows LST dominance.
  • Proposer commitments allow validators to promise blocks without certain transactions, improving user experience.
Enshrined
PBS Design
Neutral
Base Layer
future-outlook
THE INCENTIVE MISMATCH

The Path Forward: From Liability to Asset

Protocol-native staking rewards are becoming a structural liability, forcing a shift to fee-based models and externalized yield.

Inflationary rewards are dilution. Native token emissions to secure a chain or protocol directly dilute existing holders. This creates a permanent sell pressure that must be offset by perpetual new demand, a model that fails during bear markets.

Security budgets become unsustainable. Protocols like Ethereum and Solana face a long-term security trilemma: high inflation erodes value, low inflation risks security, and fee revenue alone is currently insufficient. This forces reliance on volatile token prices.

The solution is fee capture. The sustainable model is EIP-1559 burn mechanics and real yield distribution to stakers, as seen with Lido on Ethereum. Security must be funded by the economic activity it enables, not by printing new tokens.

Evidence: Post-Merge, Ethereum's net issuance turned negative during periods of high activity, making ETH a yield-bearing, deflationary asset. Protocols that fail to make this transition, like many Layer 1 altcoins, will see their staking rewards become a terminal liability.

takeaways
THE STAKING DILEMMA

TL;DR for Protocol Architects

Staking rewards, once a primary growth lever, are now creating unsustainable economic drag and security vulnerabilities for major protocols.

01

The Inflationary Death Spiral

Protocols like Ethereum and Solana use token emissions to pay for security, creating a constant sell pressure that outpaces real demand. This leads to a vicious cycle: lower token price โ†’ higher APY needed to attract stakers โ†’ higher inflation.

  • Real Yield Gap: Staking APY often exceeds protocol fee revenue by 5-10x.
  • Dilution Cost: New token supply can dilute existing holders by 3-5% annually.
3-5%
Annual Dilution
5-10x
APY vs. Fees
02

The Centralization Vector

High staking rewards disproportionately benefit large, sophisticated operators (e.g., Lido, Coinbase, Figment), creating systemic risk. The pursuit of yield optimizes for capital efficiency over network resilience.

  • Validator Concentration: Top 3 entities often control >33% of staked supply.
  • Liquidity Dominance: Liquid staking tokens (LSTs) like stETH create a de facto governance and economic layer.
>33%
Top 3 Control
$30B+
LST TVL
03

Opportunity Cost & Capital Lockup

Billions in productive capital are trapped in low-utility staking contracts instead of fueling DeFi composability. This creates a liquidity sink that stifles innovation in lending (Aave, Compound) and DEX pools (Uniswap, Curve).

  • Locked Capital: $100B+ is locked in staking across major chains.
  • Yield Compression: Native staking crowds out risk-adjusted returns for other DeFi primitives.
$100B+
Capital Locked
~80%
Less Liquid
04

Solution: Fee-Burning & Restaking

The shift is towards fee-burning mechanisms (EIP-1559) and restaking ecosystems (EigenLayer). These models decouple security spending from inflation and unlock staked capital for additional validation tasks.

  • Net Negative Issuance: Ethereum has burned over 4 million ETH since EIP-1559.
  • Capital Multiplier: Restaking allows the same ETH to secure AVSs, boosting yield without new inflation.
4M ETH
Burned
$15B+
Restaked TVL
05

Solution: Minimal Viable Issuance

Protocols like Celestia and near-zero inflation chains are adopting a security-first, subsidy-last model. Security is funded by fees, and staking rewards are a minimal backstop, not a primary incentive.

  • Sub-1% Inflation: Target staking yields are often just 0.5-1%.
  • Fee Capture: Validator revenue is directly tied to actual network usage and demand.
<1%
Target Inflation
100%
Fee-Based Rewards
06

Solution: Delegated Physical Hardware

Networks like Solana and Sui are moving validation costs from tokenomics to hardware requirements. High-performance nodes act as a capital barrier, reducing reliance on inflationary rewards to secure the network.

  • Hardware as Stake: Security comes from $10k+ node investments, not just token ownership.
  • Reduced Sell Pressure: Lower token-based rewards directly decrease the protocol's liability.
$10k+
Node Cost
-90%
Lower Emissions
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Why Staking Rewards Are a Protocol Liability in 2025 | ChainScore Blog