Firelight Protocol has announced a new partnership with Sentora, an institutional DeFi intelligence and risk management platform, in a move that could help close one of the biggest gaps holding back broader institutional participation in decentralized finance: protection against onchain risk.
The collaboration will bring native coverage to Sentora’s public and private vaults, creating a capital-backed protection layer designed to sit directly inside the platform’s infrastructure. Sentora, which already manages billions in deployed capital, has built a reputation as a major curator of institutional DeFi strategies and has integrated its infrastructure into platforms including Kraken and Fireblocks. With Firelight now stepping in as the cover protocol, users participating in Sentora’s vault ecosystem will gain access to embedded protection against some of DeFi’s most persistent threats, including smart contract exploits, oracle failures, and bad debt.
For both companies, the partnership is about more than adding another product layer. It is an attempt to make protection a native part of how capital is deployed onchain. That idea is increasingly important as institutional investors continue exploring DeFi but remain wary of the risks that have historically defined the sector.
“What we hear consistently from institutional allocators and retail platforms is that an onchain cover primitive is needed for DeFi to reach broader adoption,” said Anthony DeMartino, CEO of Sentora. “Even with leading risk models, many participants want more than risk mitigation alone. They want a clear, capital-backed protection layer that can be integrated directly into how capital is deployed onchain. This partnership with Firelight helps bring that missing layer to market.”
His comments point to a long-running challenge in decentralized finance. While the industry has made major advances in liquidity, strategy design, and automation, security concerns continue to slow institutional adoption. Exploits, protocol failures, and unexpected losses have made risk management a central issue for funds, custodians, exchanges, and asset managers looking to allocate capital onchain. Firelight and Sentora appear to be positioning their partnership as a practical answer to that problem by integrating coverage where the capital already lives.
Firelight itself is built on Flare Network and uses FXRP, a non-custodial 1:1 representation of XRP, as its primary collateral mechanism. That structure is intended to provide a diversified and uncorrelated reserve base while also allowing XRP to be deployed as a yield-bearing asset through coverage provision. Flare is also a strategic investor in Sentora, adding another layer of alignment between the infrastructure, risk, and capital components behind the partnership.
“Firelight and Sentora represent exactly what we’ve been building toward with Flare, which is institutional-grade infrastructure that puts XRP to work in ways that were not previously possible,” said Hugo Philion, co-founder of Flare. “This partnership demonstrates how DeFi at scale can be supported by robust collateral, transparent risk frameworks, and integrated protection mechanisms.”
Supporting Institutional DeFi Adoption
The technical design of Firelight’s architecture is meant to reinforce that goal. According to the announcement, the system combines diversified collateral pools, programmatic underwriting powered by Sentora’s risk models, and automated claims processing. In theory, that setup should reduce the friction often associated with claims resolution while preserving transparency and capital efficiency. For institutional users, those are not small details. In a market where trust, speed, and clarity matter just as much as yield, the ability to buy protection without leaving the workflow could be a meaningful advantage.
The partnership also arrives at a time when the conversation around DeFi has shifted from speculation toward infrastructure. Institutional adoption has often been described as the next major phase for the sector, but that transition has always depended on more than better interfaces or deeper liquidity. It requires tools that look and feel closer to traditional financial safeguards, even if they are delivered in a decentralized format. Firelight and Sentora seem to believe that embedded protection can become one of those foundational tools.
If the model gains traction, it could help standardize coverage as a core feature of DeFi capital deployment rather than an optional add-on. That would be a notable development for an industry that has spent years proving the mechanics of decentralized lending, borrowing, and yield generation, while still searching for ways to make those systems feel safer to larger pools of capital. For now, the Firelight-Sentora partnership stands as a clear signal of where parts of the DeFi market may be heading next: toward protection that is built in, not bolted on.