The decentralized finance (DeFi) world is beginning to reward actual profits. Hyperliquid, Pump.fun, and EdgeX together distributed about $96.3 million to token holders in the last 30 days.
The trend showed that investors are starting to look to protocols that generate and share genuine revenue, not just growth promises, high transaction speeds, or inflated user activity metrics.
On the other hand, EdgeX reported $23.26 million in protocol revenue, up from $8.26 million, suggesting a reserve or another funding source to pay the distributions. The figures mark a growing shift in the crypto sector.
Why are DeFi investors focusing on revenue now?
DeFi products competed with each other for years on measures such as TVL, daily users, and transaction throughput. But as traders turn away from long-term promises to sustainable business models, market sentiment is shifting.
Robbie Klages recently summarized the new mood in the market by saying that investors no longer care if a blockchain processes “10x the TPS” if it can’t earn. His remarks are part of a broader view that DeFi initiatives are now being seen more as businesses than as experimental crypto networks.
A more difficult market has also driven investors to places where they can visibly see income. It also means that, with competition on the rise and not wanting to be a speculator, protocols without firm revenue models are at risk of being looked at as ventures with no clear-cut success path. The scale of the trend is also illustrated in annualized figures.
Hyperliquid generated about $945.87 million in annual revenue, with holders receiving all of it. Pump.fun earned $481.15 million on its annualized basis, and EdgeX reached $236.42 million. Token holders are increasingly seeking direct economic value from the protocols they support, making this transition a key one.
Rather than hoping token prices will rise purely on speculation, many investors now look forward to platforms sharing revenue like paying dividends or buybacks, as we do in traditional finance.
How do established DeFi platforms compare?
The latest data also shows how emerging DeFi apps are gradually competing with some of the industry’s leading names. Chainlink delivered $4.63 million to token holders in the same period, while Aerodrome returned $3.53 million. Uniswap distributed $3.29 million across 44 blockchain networks.
On the other hand, PancakeSwap generated revenue of $3.94 million but returned only $2.48 million to holders, after spending about $905,260 on incentives. It is now more critically important to differentiate between revenue generation and actual distributions.
Some protocols spend lavishly on incentives to attract liquidity and users, while others return it directly to token holders. That division could influence how investors evaluate DeFi projects going forward.
A protocol with lighter trading but stronger cash distributions may become even more appealing to investors than one with higher trading volumes but weaker earnings.
Also evident is that younger platforms are challenging older DeFi brands, with newer brands offering clearer economic benefits to their communities.
Is DeFi becoming real financial infrastructure?
The conversation about DeFi revenue follows the industry’s rapid growth from speculation and memecoin trading. In his latest blog post, Andre Cronje said that DeFi in 2026 increasingly resembles functional financial infrastructure rather than an experimental crypto niche.
He cited a skyrocketing sector market of stablecoins, worth over $320 billion today, led by companies like Tether and Circle. He also pointed out that decentralized exchanges handle over $160 billion in monthly spot trading volume and that perpetual decentralized exchanges process roughly $540 billion in monthly activity.
Cronje said several lending platforms, including Aave, Morpho, and Maple Finance, now manage around $28 billion of active loans. This is a new kind of asset collateral, more directly linked to real-world assets and increasingly used as on-chain collateral. The larger point is that DeFi could be entering a more mature stage.
Some protocols are now beginning to operate more like cash-generating financial networks with measurable business performance rather than speculation. Sustainability, however, will be the next challenge.
Investors will be paying close attention to whether these protocols can generate strong revenue without depending on token incentives or aggressive growth campaigns.
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