defi infrastrcuture, hedge fund, yield How Hedge Funds Are Approaching On-chain Yield Strategies in 2026

<hr><h2 id="series-defi-infrastructure-for-institutions">Series: DeFi Infrastructure for Institutions</h2><p>P2P.org's content series for regulated institutions evaluating on-chain capital allocation. Each article addresses a specific infrastructure, governance, or compliance dimension that determines whether a DeFi allocation can clear institutional approval and operate within mandate.</p><p>This is the second article in the third trilogy of the series, examining the operational reality for specific institutional profiles. <a href="https://p2p.org/economy/defi-vault-allocation-custodians-infrastructure-risk/">The first article</a> examined the infrastructure requirements and risk considerations for custodians. The third article will address institutional treasury teams. The previous trilogy examined how conflict-of-interest frameworks across MiFID II, AIFMD II, and IOSCO's DeFi recommendations are converging on the curator model: <a href="https://p2p.org/economy/conflict-of-interest-defi-vault-regulation-institutional/">How Conflict-of-Interest Regulatory Frameworks Are Catching Up to the Curator Model</a></p><p><em>Previously in this series: </em><a href="https://p2p.org/economy/defi-vault-allocation-custodians-infrastructure-risk/"><em>DeFi Vault Allocation for Custodians: Infrastructure Requirements and Risk Considerations</em></a></p><h2 id="learnings-for-busy-readers">Learnings for Busy Readers</h2><p>Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. For the full analysis and supporting data, continue reading below.</p><ul><li>Over 55% of traditional hedge funds now hold digital assets as of 2025, up from 47% the year before. DeFi-focused funds expanded 22% in 2025 and averaged 28% returns driven by staking, restaking, and decentralised lending. The shift from experimentation to structured allocation is documented and accelerating.</li><li>Crypto-native and traditional hedge funds face different starting points. Crypto-native funds have the technical access and on-chain familiarity but may lack the governance infrastructure to satisfy institutional LP due diligence. Traditional hedge funds have strong governance frameworks but face a technical access and operational integration gap when interacting with DeFi vault protocols directly.</li><li>The four primary on-chain yield strategies hedge funds are pursuing in 2026 are stablecoin lending in curated vaults, delta-neutral yield strategies, ETH liquid staking combined with DeFi vault allocation, and real-world asset vault strategies. Each carries a distinct risk profile and governance requirement.</li><li>Risk management is now the primary differentiator, not yield. The Sortino ratio, which focuses on downside risk rather than total volatility, is emerging as the preferred performance metric for DeFi strategies because it better reflects the asymmetric risk profile of on-chain yield positions.</li><li>The governance infrastructure requirements for hedge funds interacting with DeFi vaults are similar to those for custodians: pre-execution mandate validation, exportable compliance logs, and contractual role separation between the curator and the infrastructure layer. Funds without this infrastructure cannot demonstrate mandate alignment to LPs or regulators.</li></ul><h2 id="introduction">Introduction</h2><p>Hedge fund participation in digital assets crossed a structural threshold in 2025. Over 55% of traditional hedge funds now invest directly in digital assets, up from 47% the year before, with institutional investors representing 56% of capital in crypto hedge funds. <br><br>Source: <a href="https://www.aima.org/?ref=p2p.org">AIMA Digital Assets Survey, November 2025</a>; <a href="https://sqmagazine.co.uk/crypto-hedge-funds-statistics/?ref=p2p.org">SQ Magazine, Crypto Hedge Funds Statistics 2026</a>) <br><br>DeFi-focused funds within that universe expanded 22% in 2025 and averaged 28% returns driven by staking, restaking, and decentralised lending, underperformed only by quantitative strategies using AI-driven algorithmic trading at 48%.</p><p>The shift is structural, not cyclical. HedgeCo reported in January 2026 that the largest crypto investment firms, including hedge funds, venture platforms, and hybrid asset managers, are increasingly evaluated as permanent participants in global capital markets rather than speculative players. On-chain asset management is projected to reach $64 billion AUM by the end of 2026 under base case assumptions, with bull case forecasts pushing materially higher.</p><p>Source: <a href="https://keyrock.com/assets/uploads/2025/09/OnchainAssetManagement-Designing-the-Future-of-Investment-Strategies.pdf?ref=p2p.org">Keyrock, Onchain Asset Management: Designing the Future of Investment Strategies, September 2025</a>)</p><p>But the move from observing on-chain yield to structuring it within a fund mandate is not straightforward. Crypto-native hedge funds have the technical access and protocol familiarity, but may not have the governance infrastructure that institutional LP due diligence now requires. Traditional hedge funds have strong governance frameworks but face an operational integration gap when interacting with DeFi vault protocols. Both profiles are now solving for the same underlying problem: how to access on-chain yield in a way that is structurally governed, mandate-aligned, and defensible to investors and regulators.</p><p>This article examines how each profile is approaching that problem, what on-chain yield strategies are attracting the most institutional capital, and what the governance infrastructure requirement looks like for a hedge fund operating at an institutional scale.</p><h2 id="the-two-hedge-fund-starting-points">The Two Hedge Fund Starting Points</h2><p>The infrastructure and governance gap between a fund that has historically operated in traditional markets and one that has been building onchain since 2020 is significant. Understanding where each profile starts from clarifies what each needs to build.</p><h3 id="crypto-native-hedge-funds">Crypto-native hedge funds</h3><p>They have accumulated years of on-chain operational experience. They understand protocol risk, have established relationships with curators, and have the technical infrastructure to interact with DeFi vaults directly. Their challenge in 2026 is institutional credibility: the LP base they are now targeting, pension funds, endowments, family offices, and fund of funds, requires governance documentation that most crypto-native funds have not built. Pre-execution mandate validation, exportable compliance logs, conflict of interest policies, and audit-compatible reporting are not standard infrastructure in crypto-native operations. The gap for these funds is governance depth rather than technical access.</p><h3 id="traditional-hedge-funds">Traditional hedge funds</h3><p>Those entering the on-chain space bring the governance infrastructure that crypto-native funds are building toward. They have established frameworks for mandate documentation, LP reporting, compliance monitoring, and risk governance. Their challenge is operational integration: interacting with DeFi vault protocols requires technical infrastructure, custody arrangements for vault tokens, and operational familiarity with smart contract-based execution that most traditional fund operations do not have. The gap for these funds is technical access capability rather than governance depth.</p><p>Both profiles are converging on the same destination: a fund structure that can access on-chain yield strategies with the governance infrastructure that institutional LP due diligence requires and the technical execution that DeFi vault protocols demand. The sequencing differs. The destination is the same.</p><h2 id="the-four-primary-onchain-yield-strategies-in-2026">The Four Primary Onchain Yield Strategies in 2026</h2><p>Hedge fund participation in DeFi vaults is not monolithic. Four distinct strategy types are attracting the majority of institutional capital in 2026, each with a distinct risk profile and governance requirement.</p><figure class="kg-card kg-image-card kg-card-hascaption"><img src="https://p2p.org/economy/content/images/2026/05/hedge-fund-onchain-yield-strategies-2026.jpg" class="kg-image" alt="A two-by-two grid showing the four on-chain yield strategies hedge funds are pursuing in 2026. Stablecoin vault lending at 5 to 8 per cent APY with lower directional risk. Delta-neutral yield with market-neutral exposure and complex rebalancing risk. ETH liquid staking plus DeFi vault with dual yield sources and collateral interaction risk. Real-world asset vaults with lower crypto correlation and off-chain verification risk." loading="lazy" width="1600" height="900" srcset="https://p2p.org/economy/content/images/size/w600/2026/05/hedge-fund-onchain-yield-strategies-2026.jpg 600w, https://p2p.org/economy/content/images/size/w1000/2026/05/hedge-fund-onchain-yield-strategies-2026.jpg 1000w, https://p2p.org/economy/content/images/2026/05/hedge-fund-onchain-yield-strategies-2026.jpg 1600w" sizes="(min-width: 720px) 720px"><figcaption><i><em class="italic" style="white-space: pre-wrap;">The four primary on-chain yield strategies hedge funds are pursuing in 2026, with yield profile and primary risk dimension for each.</em></i></figcaption></figure><h3 id="stablecoin-lending-in-curated-vaults">Stablecoin lending in curated vaults</h3><p>Stablecoin lending across Morpho, Aave, and Euler remains the most established entry point for hedge funds accessing on-chain yield. DeFi protocols deliver 5 to 8% APY on stablecoin deposits, compared to 4 to 5% for traditional money market funds.</p><p>Source: <a href="https://www.ainvest.com/news/defi-2-0-frontier-yield-governance-2026-2512/?ref=p2p.org">AInvest, DeFi 2.0: The New Frontier of Yield and Governance in 2026</a>)</p><p>The yield spread is meaningful without requiring significant directional exposure. For funds with stablecoin mandates or treasury allocation flexibility, curated stablecoin vaults offer protocol-native yield with a risk profile closer to traditional fixed income than to directional crypto. The governance requirement is standard vault infrastructure: pre-execution controls, compliance log production, and role separation.</p><h3 id="delta-neutral-yield-strategies">Delta-neutral yield strategies</h3><p>A growing segment of hedge fund DeFi participation involves strategies designed to generate yield while neutralising directional price exposure. A common structure involves lending a stable asset while borrowing a volatile one to deploy into separate protocols, insulating the overall position from market movements while generating protocol-native yield from both legs. These strategies are particularly attractive during periods of high volatility when directional bets become risky. The governance requirement is more demanding than simple vault allocation: delta-neutral strategies involve multiple protocol interactions and continuous rebalancing, which requires pre-execution validation across a more complex transaction graph and a compliance log that captures every leg of the strategy, not just single vault interactions.</p><h3 id="eth-liquid-staking-combined-with-defi-vault-allocation">ETH liquid staking combined with DeFi vault allocation</h3><p>Funds already holding ETH staking exposure are increasingly combining liquid staking token positions with DeFi vault allocation to stack protocol-native yields. An ETH position generating liquid staking token rewards can be simultaneously deployed as collateral in a lending vault, generating an additional yield layer from the same underlying asset. This strategy requires understanding the interaction between the liquid staking token's risk profile and the vault's collateral parameters, and the governance requirement includes validating that the combined exposure stays within the fund's concentration limits and collateral allowlists at every rebalancing point.</p><h3 id="real-world-asset-vault-strategies">Real-world asset vault strategies</h3><p>RWA-backed vaults derive returns from offchain economic activity including government debt, private credit, insurance premiums, and payment financing. Their yield profiles are less correlated with crypto market cycles and more closely aligned with traditional fixed income products, making them attractive to traditional hedge funds seeking onchain access without full crypto market correlation. JPMorgan Asset Management's launch of a $100 million tokenised money market fund on Ethereum in 2025 signalled the institutional legitimacy of this strategy category. The governance requirement for RWA vault strategies includes verification that the offchain asset backing is accurately represented onchain, which adds a due diligence layer beyond the standard vault governance framework.</p><p>Source: <a href="https://gogol.substack.com/p/three-key-on-chain-finance-trends?ref=p2p.org">Gogol, Three Key Onchain Finance Trends in 2026, December 2025</a></p><h2 id="risk-management-as-the-primary-differentiator">Risk Management as the Primary Differentiator</h2><p>One of the most significant developments in institutional DeFi participation in 2025 and 2026 is the shift in what differentiates serious institutional participants from the broader market. Yield is no longer the primary differentiator. Risk management is.</p><p>Today's leading DeFi vaults are not passive vehicles that run indefinitely once deployed. They are actively managed structures shaped by explicit constraints and ongoing oversight. The funds accessing them at institutional scale are applying risk management frameworks that go materially beyond the standard retail DeFi due diligence of evaluating curator track records and protocol audit histories.</p><p>The Sortino ratio is emerging as the preferred performance metric for DeFi strategies over the traditional Sharpe ratio. The Sharpe ratio measures returns relative to total volatility, which is less suited to DeFi's high-volatility environment. The Sortino ratio focuses on downside risk specifically, providing a more accurate view of risk-adjusted performance in markets where upside volatility is not a risk dimension that institutional LPs penalise. DeFi protocols, including Aave, are building risk modules specifically to improve Sortino ratios, through mechanisms like over-collateralised vaults and real-time rebalancing analytics, making them increasingly attractive to risk-averse institutional funds.</p><p>Source: <a href="https://www.ainvest.com/news/defi-2-0-frontier-yield-governance-2026-2512/?ref=p2p.org">AInvest, DeFi 2.0: The New Frontier of Yield and Governance in 2026</a></p><p>For hedge funds, the risk management framework for on-chain yield strategies needs to address four specific dimensions that do not exist in traditional asset management.</p><h3 id="smart-contract-risk-assessment">Smart contract risk assessment</h3><p>Every protocol layer in the vault's execution stack carries smart contract risk: the vault itself, the underlying lending protocols, any oracle infrastructure providing price feeds, and any bridge infrastructure involved in cross-chain positions. Unlike counterparty risk in traditional finance, smart contract risk is non-recoverable if exploited. Funds must evaluate the audit history, formal verification status, and bug bounty programs of every layer before allocating, and must have a framework for reassessing that risk as protocol upgrades occur.</p><h3 id="curator-incentive-alignment-evaluation">Curator incentive alignment evaluation</h3><p>As the second trilogy of this series established, the curator model creates a structural conflict of interest between TVL optimisation and mandate alignment. Funds need to evaluate not just whether a curator has a strong track record, but whether the infrastructure governing the relationship between the curator and the fund's capital validates mandate alignment at the execution level, independently of the curator's own incentives.</p><h3 id="liquidity-stress-modelling">Liquidity stress modelling</h3><p>DeFi vault positions are not always instantly redeemable. Vault liquidity depends on the available liquidity in the underlying lending markets, which can tighten during market stress events. Funds whose LP agreements or redemption policies specify withdrawal timelines must model vault liquidity conditions as a variable in redemption planning, not treat vault positions as equivalent in liquidity to cash or short-term fixed income.</p><h3 id="systemic-collateral-concentration-risk">Systemic collateral concentration risk</h3><p>The KelpDAO episode of April 2026, in which a single cross-chain collateral token's depegging drove $14 billion out of DeFi in 48 hours, illustrated the systemic risk dimension of collateral concentration across DeFi protocols. Funds holding positions in multiple vaults that share common collateral tokens carry correlated exposure that is difficult to model through standard counterparty risk frameworks. Position-level monitoring of shared collateral dependencies is an emerging requirement for institutional DeFi risk management.</p><blockquote><strong>The institutional digital asset space moves fast.</strong> Our subscribers get structured analysis across staking, DeFi vaults, and regulation through <em>DeFi Dispatch</em>, <em>Institutional Lens</em>, <em>DeFi Infrastructure for Institutions</em>, and <em>Legal Layer</em>. No noise. Just the signals that matter. <strong>Subscribe to the newsletter at the bottom of this page.</strong></blockquote><h2 id="governance-infrastructure-requirements-for-hedge-funds">Governance Infrastructure Requirements for Hedge Funds</h2><p>The governance infrastructure requirements for hedge funds accessing DeFi vaults are structurally similar to those for custodians, with one additional dimension: LP reporting.</p><h3 id="pre-execution-mandate-validation">Pre-execution mandate validation</h3><p>A hedge fund operating within a documented investment mandate needs to demonstrate to its LPs and, increasingly, to regulators that every allocation decision is within mandate parameters at the point of execution. In a DeFi vault context, this means the same independent pre-execution validation layer identified in the custodian article: a function that checks every vault interaction against the fund's mandate before it executes, independently of the curator's decisions, and produces a log of every check, every block, and every approved transaction.</p><h3 id="exportable-compliance-logs">Exportable compliance logs</h3><p>Hedge fund LPs conducting operational due diligence and regulators reviewing fund compliance need to be able to verify that capital was managed within mandate parameters at every historical execution point. A vault dashboard is not sufficient. The compliance log must be sequential, timestamped, and exportable in a format that an external auditor can verify independently. This is the same requirement that applies across all regulated delegated capital management arrangements. DeFi vault allocation does not exempt funds from it.</p><h3 id="conflict-of-interest-documentation">Conflict of interest documentation</h3><p>As the regulatory trilogy of this series established, MiFID II, AIFMD II, and IOSCO's DeFi recommendations all require the identification, documentation, and management of conflicts of interest in investment management arrangements. For hedge funds interacting with DeFi vault curators, this means documenting the curator's incentive structure, the potential conflicts it creates, and the governance controls that manage those conflicts. The independent validation layer is the primary control. Its existence and operation need to be documented in the fund's conflicts of interest policy.</p><h3 id="lp-reporting-integration">LP reporting integration</h3><p>Beyond regulatory compliance, hedge funds face LP reporting requirements that custodians do not. LPs expect portfolio-level NAV reporting that accurately represents vault token positions at their underlying asset value, attribution reporting that separates protocol-native yield from curator strategy performance, and risk reporting that reflects the smart contract, curator concentration, and liquidity risk dimensions specific to DeFi vault positions. Funds that cannot produce this reporting in a format consistent with LP expectations will face LP due diligence failures regardless of their investment performance.</p><p>Spark's February 2026 launch of Spark Prime and Spark Institutional Lending, which extended more than $9 billion in on-chain stablecoin liquidity to hedge funds and trading firms while keeping collateral overcollateralized and custody controls off-chain, illustrates the direction the market is moving: institutional-grade DeFi yield access with the risk controls and reporting infrastructure that hedge fund LPs require.</p><p>Source: <a href="https://www.coindesk.com/business/2026/02/11/spark-looks-to-build-building-a-safe-bridge-between-onchain-capital-and-tradfi?ref=p2p.org">CoinDesk, February 2026</a></p><h2 id="what-this-means-for-hedge-funds-evaluating-onchain-yield">What This Means for Hedge Funds Evaluating Onchain Yield</h2><p>The hedge funds that are building durable on-chain yield programs in 2026 are not the ones chasing the highest available APY across curator-managed vaults. They are the ones that have identified the governance infrastructure requirement, built or sourced the independent validation layer, and structured their on-chain positions within a framework that their LPs can audit and their risk committees can defend.</p><p>The market signal is clear. On-chain asset management is on track to reach $64 billion AUM by the end of 2026 under base case assumptions, with institutional investors already representing 56% of capital in crypto hedge funds. The yield opportunity is documented and growing. The differentiation between funds that capture it durably and funds that encounter governance failures will be determined by infrastructure, not strategy.</p><p>For hedge funds evaluating on-chain yield strategies, the questions that matter are not primarily about which protocols or curators to access. They are about whether the infrastructure governing that access can produce the pre-execution validation, compliance log, and LP reporting that institutional-grade operation requires. The funds that answer those questions first will build the track records that attract the next wave of institutional LP capital.</p><p><a href="https://p2p.org/?ref=p2p.org#form">Talk to our team</a> if you are evaluating how <a href="http://p2p.org/?ref=p2p.org">P2P.org</a>'s protection layer supports hedge fund on-chain yield programs.</p><h2 id="key-takeaway">Key Takeaway</h2><p>Hedge fund participation in on-chain yield strategies is past the experimentation phase. DeFi-focused funds expanded 22% in 2025 and averaged 28% returns. The structural shift is documented and accelerating.</p><p>The differentiation in 2026 is not yield access. Most funds that want to access on-chain yield can find a path to do so. The differentiation is governance infrastructure: pre-execution mandate validation, exportable compliance logs, conflict of interest documentation, and LP reporting integration that demonstrates mandate alignment at every execution point.</p><p>Crypto-native funds that build this governance layer will be positioned to attract institutional LP capital at the scale their on-chain expertise warrants. Traditional funds that build the technical access layer within their existing governance frameworks will be positioned to deploy the capital they already manage into on-chain yield strategies. Both paths lead to the same place: an institutional-grade on-chain yield program that a risk committee can approve, an LP can audit, and a regulator can examine.</p><p><em>Next in this series: Stablecoin Onchain Strategies for Institutional Treasury Mandates</em></p><h2 id="frequently-asked-questions-faqs">Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)<br></h2><h3 id="what-on-chain-yield-strategies-are-hedge-funds-pursuing-in-2026">What on-chain yield strategies are hedge funds pursuing in 2026?</h3><p>The four primary strategies attracting institutional hedge fund capital in 2026 are stablecoin lending in curated vaults across protocols including Morpho, Aave, and Euler; delta-neutral yield strategies that neutralise directional price exposure while generating protocol-native yield from multiple positions; ETH liquid staking combined with DeFi vault allocation to stack yield layers from the same underlying asset; and real-world asset vault strategies that derive returns from offchain economic activity including government debt and private credit, offering lower correlation with crypto market cycles.</p><h3 id="why-is-the-sortino-ratio-preferred-over-the-sharpe-ratio-for-defi-strategies">Why is the Sortino ratio preferred over the Sharpe ratio for DeFi strategies?</h3><p>The Sharpe ratio measures returns relative to total volatility. In DeFi's high-volatility environment, upside volatility can distort the Sharpe ratio in ways that do not reflect actual risk. The Sortino ratio focuses specifically on downside risk, providing a more accurate view of risk-adjusted performance for strategies where upside volatility is not a concern institutional LPs penalise. DeFi protocols including Aave are building mechanisms specifically designed to impro</p><h3 id="how-does-the-governance-infrastructure-requirement-for-hedge-funds-differ-from-that-for-custodians">How does the governance infrastructure requirement for hedge funds differ from that for custodians?</h3><p>The core infrastructure requirements are similar: pre-execution mandate validation, exportable compliance logs, and contractual role separation between the curator and the infrastructure layer. The primary additional requirement for hedge funds is LP reporting integration: portfolio-level NAV reporting that accurately represents vault token positions at their underlying asset value, attribution reporting that separates protocol-native yield from curator strategy performance, and risk reporting that reflects the smart contract, curator concentration, and liquidity risk dimensions specific to DeFi vault positions.</p><h3 id="what-is-systemic-collateral-concentration-risk-and-why-does-it-matter-for-hedge-funds">What is systemic collateral concentration risk, and why does it matter for hedge funds?</h3><p>Systemic collateral concentration risk arises when multiple DeFi vaults share common collateral tokens. If that collateral token depegs or experiences a liquidity crisis, the impact propagates simultaneously across all vaults using it as collateral. The KelpDAO episode of April 2026 illustrated this: a single cross-chain collateral token's depegging drove $14 billion out of DeFi in 48 hours, affecting vaults across multiple protocols simultaneously. Hedge funds holding positions in multiple vaults that share common collateral tokens carry correlated exposure that standard counterparty risk frameworks do not capture. Position-level monitoring of shared collateral dependencies is an emerging requirement for institutional DeFi risk management.</p><h3 id="how-should-hedge-funds-evaluate-defi-vault-curators">How should hedge funds evaluate DeFi vault curators?</h3><p>The primary question is not whether a curator has a strong track record but whether the infrastructure governing the relationship between the curator and the fund's capital validates mandate alignment at the execution level, independently of the curator's own incentives. Curators are incentivised by TVL growth and performance fees, not by mandate alignment with any individual fund. Without an independent pre-execution validation layer sitting above the curator's execution decisions, the fund cannot demonstrate mandate alignment to its LPs or regulators, regardless of the curator's historical performance.</p><hr><p><strong>About P2P.org</strong></p><p><a href="http://p2p.org/?ref=p2p.org">P2P.org</a> builds the protection layer that sits between regulated institutions and DeFi execution environments, independently of the curators who manage allocation strategies. If you are evaluating the infrastructure requirements for a DeFi allocation program, <a href="https://p2p.org/?ref=p2p.org#form">reach out to our team of experts</a>.</p><hr><p><strong>Disclaimer</strong></p><p>This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, regulatory, compliance, or investment advice. Regulatory obligations may vary depending on jurisdiction and specific business activities. Readers should consult their own legal and compliance advisors regarding applicable requirements.</p>

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