Why Slashing Aptos Staking Rewards to 3.79% Could Hurt More Than Help 👀

#Amnis Finance, a major liquid staking protocol on Aptos, critiques AIP-119, a proposal to cut Aptos’ staking rewards from 7% to 3.79%. They argue it’s too drastic, potentially damaging validator sustainability, network decentralization, DeFi innovation, and Aptos’ appeal compared to other Layer 1s like Solana (6%+) or Ethereum (3-4%). Key risks include: reduced retail and institutional interest, a DeFi TVL collapse due to unprofitable strategies, stifled innovation, validator centralization, and capital flight to higher-yielding chains or even U.S. Treasuries (~5%). Instead, they propose a gradual reduction to 6% over three months (0.33% monthly cuts) to balance inflation control with ecosystem health.

I think Amnis makes a solid case. The 7% APR is a big draw for Aptos, especially as a newer L1 competing with heavyweights. Dropping it to 3.79% feels like pulling the rug out from under validators and DeFi users, risking a domino effect—less staking, weaker DeFi, and capital leaving for greener pastures like Solana or even traditional finance. Their analogy to national interest rates hits the mark: you don’t slash rates in a growing economy unless you want to scare off investors. The gradual 6% plan seems smarter—eases the transition, keeps Aptos competitive, and avoids shocking the ecosystem. That said, the proposal’s intent to curb inflation isn’t baseless; it’s just the execution that feels rushed. A middle ground makes sense here.

What do you think?

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