DeFi landscape has been marked by impressive growth, yet persistent volatility remains a defining feature as 2025 draws to a close. The ecosystem hit a record $237 billion in total value locked (TLV) in Q3 2025, but the exuberance was short-lived. By late November, the total TVL had contracted by $55 billion, falling to $123 billion.
Despite these sharp fluctuations, DeFi participation has not only held steady but has gone way up. Over 14.2 million wallets were engaged in the ecosystem this year, and Ethereum continues to capture around 63% of all DeFi activity.
This high level of participation can be seen as a testament to DeFi’s potential. However, according to some experts, the volatility has exposed a fundamental challenge: the constant need to react to market conditions, placing success out of reach for most users.
Users have been expected to continuously monitor liquidity ranges, adjust positions, and navigate shifting arbitrage opportunities. This has created a paradox where, despite the claim that money grows on its own, DeFi participants are actually burdened with time-consuming, manual tasks to optimize their returns.
One example of this view is Ron Bodkin, a former Google executive who now leads the team for AI Agent Protocol Theoriq. Bodkin claims that he has watched the burden on everyday users increase as DeFi has scaled.
“Most people came to DeFi hoping their money would work for them,” Bodkin says.
“But somehow it turned into them working for their money: checking charts at midnight, adjusting ranges in between meetings. It’s kind of backwards and wears users down.”
According to Bodkin, real passivity won’t come from asking users to do even more but from rethinking how yield is managed altogether. This sounds less like the yield-chasing days of past cycles and more like a search for tools that don’t depend on users being glued to their wallets.
Bringing AI Into DeFi Without the Black Box Problem
Theoriq’s new protocol, AlphaVault, fits into a broader shift toward more autonomous forms of DeFi management. In the past year, more projects have started experimenting with the overlap between DeFi and AI (sometimes called DeFAI), using agents to help automate routine decisions and keep up with fast-moving markets.
It’s the kind of experimentation that has slowly moved from hackathon curiosity to something protocol teams now discuss as part of long-term roadmaps. Bodkin adds:
“We’re seeing more interest in AI across DeFi, but the real challenge is making sure people can understand and trust what those agents are doing. Transparency has to grow alongside automation, or none of this scales the way people hope.”
AlphaVault is among the DeFi vaults experimenting with using specialized AI agents to manage user capital directly. Instead of relying on simple, rule-based compounding tools, it uses a multi-agent system built to adjust to changing market conditions. This setup was tested under real pressure during Theoriq’s testnet, which processed more than 65 million agent requests across 2.1 million wallets.
According to the team, one of the key differences with it and other AI Agent protocols is how it handles transparency and safety. Earlier attempts were often criticized for hiding how decisions were made.
AlphaVault approaches this with “policy cages”, which are smart-contract rules that define exactly what an agent is allowed to do, from asset types to position sizes. These boundaries are meant to give users a clearer sense of how the system operates and reduce the risks seen in earlier AI experiments.
At launch, AlphaVault is integrating with established, trusted partners in the Ethereum yield space. These include Lido’s stRATEGY vault, curated by Mellow Protocol, and Chorus One’s MEV Max, powered by StakeWise.
These partnerships allow AlphaVault to allocate capital into established Ethereum yield strategies that have been used across the ecosystem. The idea is to give users a way to earn returns without constantly checking or adjusting their positions, though how well this works in practice will depend on the system’s long-term performance.
Bootstrapping Liquidity the Way Many DeFi Projects Now Do
Across DeFi, early participation programs have become a common way for projects to build liquidity and establish an initial base of total value locked (TVL), giving new systems room to operate under real conditions. AlphaVault is taking a similar route.
To get the vault started, Theoriq has launched an incentivized bootstrapping phase where the community can lock ETH and earn points that convert into $THQ rewards. As this phase progresses, TVL gradually moves from being locked capital to live capital managed inside AlphaVault by its autonomous agents.
It’s a familiar pattern in DeFi, but in this case the capital doesn’t just sit but becomes fuel for a system designed to operate with minimal manual oversight, the team claims.
Where things get more interesting is in how $THQ is meant to function going forward. Instead of serving only as an incentive, Theoriq plans for it to become a reputation token that lets users stake behind AI agents they believe are performing well.
If an agent behaves poorly or fails to meet expectations, those stakes can be partially slashed. This mechanism aims to keep quality high and discourage reckless behavior.
This approach reflects a broader industry effort to bring more accountability into automated systems. Rather than relying on marketing claims or opaque performance reports, the idea is to let reputation form directly around how these agents behave over time.
In theory, that creates a system where trust isn’t based on personalities or promises, but on visible, on-chain performance, and where the community has a direct role in shaping which AI agents earn more responsibility.
Where DeFi Goes After the Yield-Chasing Era
Theoriq hopes to shift the industry conversation away from chasing bigger APYs and toward reducing the amount of work users are expected to do. It is designed based on the idea that developers are looking for ways to offload the constant monitoring, rebalancing, and decision-making that most people still carry out manually.
The goal isn’t to remove users from the process, but to build tools that take care of the routine, time-sensitive parts of on-chain management so people don’t have to treat DeFi like a side job.
According to the team, there’s a growing interest among users in systems that can operate more consistently in the background, reacting to market conditions without requiring them to intervene every few hours. This type of automation is increasingly seen as a natural next step for a sector that wants to mature, scale, and bring in a broader audience.
It’s within this wider push for more dependable, transparent on-chain automation that Theoriq and its AlphaVault system may make sense. Whether AI-managed vaults become standard or remain early experiments is still an open question, but the direction of the industry makes their arrival feel far from accidental.
Source: https://beincrypto.com/passive-defi-ai-vault-systems/