Aave is bank-sized, but $2.9T in corporate loans reveals the risk DeFi still can’t price

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8 Min Read


US commercial and industrial lending reached $2.89 trillion at commercial banks for the week ending May 13, up roughly $183 billion year-to-date and 8.19% above year-ago levels.

Corporate America has borrowed heavily through rising rates and continues borrowing into tightening bank credit conditions, adding more to bank balance sheets in the first five months of 2026 than most DeFi protocols have ever intermediated in total.

Aave ended 2025 with $55 billion in deposits after peaking at $75 billion, placing it alongside mid-sized US banks in terms of asset scale. DefiLlama data show its current active loan book is $10.9 billion, roughly 0.38% of the US C&I loan market.

Tokenized credit across all on-chain platforms, including Maple, Centrifuge, and STOKR, reaches $5.3 billion in distributed value and $22.7 billion in represented value, according to RWA.xyz.

Together, those figures represent less than 1% of what US banks extend to businesses alone.

The corporate credit market DeFi has barely touched
US commercial bank C&I loans at $2.89 trillion dwarf Aave’s $10.9 billion active loan book and $5.3 billion in tokenized credit distributed value.

The rate paradox

Aave V3 on Base shows a 30-day average USDC borrow APR of 4.24%, against the Federal Reserve’s published US bank prime loan rate of 6.75%.

Feature Aave-style DeFi lending Bank C&I lending
What the lender prices Liquid collateral risk Business repayment risk
Typical collateral Crypto assets / stablecoins Cash flows, receivables, inventory, contracts
Main risk control Automatic liquidation Covenants, underwriting, legal recovery
Rate behavior Variable, utilization-driven More predictable credit lines / negotiated terms
Best borrower fit Crypto-native borrower with liquid collateral Company seeking working capital or expansion credit
Main blocker for corporate adoption Borrower must post excess liquid collateral Slower, more expensive, but built for business risk

The Fed’s April Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey noted that banks tightened C&I credit standards across firm sizes, raised premiums on riskier loans, and imposed stricter covenants and collateral requirements, even as C&I balances continued to climb.

Aave’s borrow rate prices collateral risk, which is the cost of accessing liquidity against assets that the protocol can liquidate automatically, while a bank’s prime rate prices repayment risk based on whether a business will generate enough cash flow to service its debt.

Those are structurally different credit products, and the 250-basis-point distance between them reflects that structural difference.

A company typically borrows because it needs capital against cash flows, receivables, inventory, purchase orders, or future contracts. Those are the business fundamentals a bank underwrites, and Aave cannot yet evaluate on-chain.

Aave’s own V3 documentation describes its borrowing model as always overcollateralized, with liquidations triggered when collateral coverage falls below defined thresholds.

That structure works well for crypto-native borrowers seeking stablecoin liquidity, but leaves corporate borrowers without a matching product.

What the infrastructure still lacks

Cash-flow underwriting requires evaluating whether a borrower can repay from sales, margins, and contracts over time.

DeFi protocols price token collateral dynamically and accurately, with no equivalent mechanism for assessing a company’s revenue quality or covenant compliance.

Corporate borrowing is useful precisely because the borrower lacks liquid collateral equal to the loan amount, and DeFi’s most battle-tested lending markets rely on overcollateralization to reduce default risk by removing the need for trust.

Real-world collateral requires valuation, verification, custody, legal enforceability, and recovery processes that smart contracts alone cannot execute.

Tokenized credit platforms like Maple and Centrifuge have made progress, but their combined distributed value of $5.31 billion represents a fraction of the receivables-backed lending that flows through traditional bank facilities each quarter.

Aave can liquidate ETH or USDC collateral in a single block, while corporate credit workouts involve covenants, waivers, restructuring negotiations, servicers, bankruptcy proceedings, and courts.

Aave’s Ethereum/USDC borrow APR on May 26 was 12.82%, compared with a 30-day average of 4.72% for the same pool, which tripled over the measurement window.

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