Vitalik Buterin, co-founder of Ethereum, has introduced a fresh architectural vision for decentralized finance (DeFi), calling for the replacement of debt-based structures with option-driven synthetic assets. Outlined recently on the Ethereum Research forum, his proposal aims to address the abrupt liquidations that imperil users during volatile market swings.
Debt-based model under fire
In the current landscape, most DeFi protocols rely heavily on collateral-backed debt systems to issue synthetic assets and algorithmic stablecoins. When the value of a user’s collateral drops below a predetermined threshold, positions are liquidated automatically to protect the protocol from losses. This mechanism, especially during times of extreme market volatility, can trigger swift and sizable losses for users.
Buterin points out that a core vulnerability of this system lies in its dependence on real-time price feeds from oracle systems, making platforms susceptible to manipulation and flash loan attacks.
Vitalik Buterin argues that securing real-time oracle systems is enormously challenging. He adds that while prediction markets or costly but secure oracle setups could help, they are not sufficiently leveraged in the present debt-based DeFi frameworks.
Mini glossary: An oracle is a mechanism that delivers external data, like prices, to smart contracts on the blockchain. A flash loan allows users to borrow assets without collateral and repay within a single transaction, sometimes exploited for price manipulation attacks.
Option-based logic instead of liquidations
Buterin’s alternative completely eliminates the concept of liquidations. Rather than borrowing against collateral, users would lock a trustless asset like ETH and mint two tokens. These tokens, resembling classic financial options, each carry a specific strike price and expiry date.
As a result, users would experience gradual and predictable exposure to market movements, replacing the threat of sudden liquidations with a more measured risk progression. Buterin suggests that for those unwilling to react instantly to short-term volatility, single-sided market maker models with slow and steady rebalancing could become feasible.
A new balance: Security over strict stability
Buterin acknowledges that this architecture may not create an ideal stablecoin for bookkeeping, as it may see annual drifts ranging from 1% to 4%. However, he argues that for long-term users prioritizing capital protection over spot price accuracy, the security gains could easily outweigh minor deviations from stability.
As one of the most prominent developers in the Ethereum network, Buterin is known for pushing innovative proposals that tackle systemic risks within DeFi. In his latest remarks, he shares that, compared to models reliant on instant oracle responses, these algorithmic stable assets feel inherently safer.
Buterin notes that algorithmic stable assets managed within a system like his proposal inspire greater confidence than those tied directly to oracles requiring real-time responses.




