
YFI
Yearn.finance price
$5,061.00
-$12.0000
(-0.24%)
Price change for the last 24 hours

Yearn.finance market info
Market cap
Market cap is calculated by multiplying the circulating supply of a coin with its latest price.
Market cap = Circulating supply × Last price
Market cap = Circulating supply × Last price
Circulating supply
Total amount of a coin that is publicly available on the market.
Market cap ranking
A coin's ranking in terms of market cap value.
All-time high
Highest price a coin has reached in its trading history.
All-time low
Lowest price a coin has reached in its trading history.
Market cap
$171.22M
Circulating supply
33,811 YFI
92.21% of
36,666 YFI
Market cap ranking
--
Audits

Last audit: 5 Mar 2020, (UTC+8)
24h high
$5,074.00
24h low
$4,983.00
All-time high
$95,017.00
-94.68% (-$89,956.00)
Last updated: 12 May 2021, (UTC+8)
All-time low
$4,026.00
+25.70% (+$1,035.00)
Last updated: 19 Jun 2022, (UTC+8)
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Yearn.finance Feed
The following content is sourced from .

Distributed State
Pretty sad state of affairs. As of today, @tplr_ai has no insider deals. We are mission bound, and will be your exit liquidity.

zerokn0wledge 🪬✨
Celestia is great tech. Unfortunately, $TIA is one of the worst / most predatory VC tokens out there.
Here is why ↓
First off, @celestia (the chain) is great tech. It was Celestia that first made cheap blobspace abundant, overcoming the main scaling bottleneck that rollups have suffered under for years.
The team also put in a huge effort on the marketing front, basically coining the entire modular narrative single-handedly, and attracting an entire ecosystem of talented builders, both across (adjacent) infrastructure layer or the app layer.
But what about the token?
This is where things take a dark turn.
Why?
The venture capital rounds tell a stark story of insider privilege.
Let me explain:
Series A investors paid just $0.0955 per token while Series B investors paid $1.00.
When TIA launched to the public at $2.29-$2.50, retail investors were already paying >20x what the earliest VCs paid.
Even with TIA’s catastrophic 95% decline from its peak, Series A investors remain up 14-17x on their initial investment, having seen returns as high as 218x at the February 2024 peak of $20.
This pricing structure means that while retail investors who bought at launch are underwater by 40-60%, every single institutional investor still remains deeply profitable.
The asymmetry is by design, not accident.
That’s supported by a token distribution that heavily favors insiders with 80% allocated to team, investors, and foundation versus just 20% for public participants.
The unlock schedule on these allocations creates predictable selling events:
- October 30, 2024: A massive unlock of 175.59 million TIA tokens represented 80% of the then-circulating supply
- Monthly unlocks continue through 2027, with 30 million tokens releasing monthly through October 2025
- Early backers received 33% of their tokens after year one, with the remaining 67% unlocking during year two
This creates what researchers have estimated as an average 12% inflation rate from unlocks alone during months 24-60 of the project.
The structural selling pressure is not a side effect, it’s literally the primary feature of the tokenomics design.
Things get worse though. Much worse.
The most damning example is @polychaincap, which invested approximately $20 million across Series A and B rounds.
Through the staking rewards loophole (see screenshot below), Polychain already sold over $82 million worth of TIA (achieving a 4x return on investment) before a single one of their primary tokens has unlocked (also see comments for more info on this).
Wow that’s pretty wild, no?
Unfortunately, there is more. Much more.
Celestia launched with an 8% annual inflation rate that decreases by 10% yearly until reaching 1.5%.
This mechanism appears reasonable on paper but becomes predatory when combined with the token distribution.
With only 25% of tokens initially circulating, the 8% inflation effectively adds 33% more tokens to the circulating supply in the first year.
Research modeling shows that this inflation pressure escalates from 1.1 million tokens per month to over 7 million tokens monthly during major unlock periods, and that the network requires > $2 million in monthly fee revenue just to offset this selling pressure (while it currently makes about $200 per day!).
So let’s quickly recap the situation so far:
- High inflation dilutes existing holders at 8% annually
- Massive periodic unlocks flood the market with supply
- Liquid staking rewards from locked tokens provide immediate selling opportunities
What this ultimately means?
They rewarded their early investors and themselves at the expense of retail, and keep dismissing legitimate concerns as “ridiculous FUD” when the token is down >95%.
Mustafa’s post below, claiming all tokens see 95% drawdowns and that critics spread “ridiculous FUD” further reinforces this, showing a worrying indifference for the losses of the people that should ultimately be the ones using the (app)chains built on Celestia.
All just a coincidence?
Possible but unlikely.
Because even when compared to other heavily VC-funded peers, Celestia’s tokenomics stand out as particularly extractive:
- Celestia: 80% insider allocation, 20% public
- Aptos: 49% insider allocation, 51% public
- Ethereum: 83.47% sold to public in crowdsale
- Bitcoin/YFI: 100% fair launch with no insider allocations
Combined with the staking rewards loophole and aggressive unlock schedule, this 80/20 distribution creates a perfect storm for value extraction.
This inevitably leads to a system where retail investors serve primarily as exit liquidity for venture capital funds.
So is it all over for $TIA?
No, but things are not looking great.
There are various proposals aiming to radically alter/improve the tokenomics, including reducing inflation by 33% or abandoning the PoS consensus (where the chain currently heavily overpays for security) entirely. Admissions that the current structure is fundamentally broken.
However, with Series A investors still up 14-17x despite a 95% price decline, the damage to retail has already been done and trust can likely not be repaired.
A price that Celestia (even though largely a B2B business model) will likely pay in the long-term, as the entire ecosystem suffers under a damaged reputation, regardless of the great tech.
That there is literally 0 organic demand for the token or utility beyond governance (which is a meme, especially if 80% of tokens went to insiders) and paying for (almost free) DA makes things even worse.
The counter-thesis to $TIA is $HYPE. No insiders and VCs dumping on retail from day 1. Clear token utility, fueling organic demand, millions in daily holder revenue, and low inflation that is also countered by a baked-in buyback mechanism.
Proof that not "every token" does a -95% from peak.
The key takeaway for builders?
It’s easy to make yourself and your VC friends rich by dumping on retail at an artificial 200x valuation.
But if you’re here to “change the game” or “build for the long-term”, you have to acknowledge that your token is ALSO a core product, and will ALSO define the success of your tech. Regardless of a $100m “war chest” full of VC funds that will be there to pay handsome salaries.
Yet the question remains: how much do you actually care if you already made all the retirement money you could have dreamed of?




9.91K
47

zerokn0wledge 🪬✨
Celestia is great tech. Unfortunately, $TIA is one of the worst / most predatory VC tokens out there.
Here is why ↓
First off, @celestia (the chain) is great tech. It was Celestia that first made cheap blobspace abundant, overcoming the main scaling bottleneck that rollups have suffered under for years.
The team also put in a huge effort on the marketing front, basically coining the entire modular narrative single-handedly, and attracting an entire ecosystem of talented builders, both across (adjacent) infrastructure layer or the app layer.
But what about the token?
This is where things take a dark turn.
Why?
The venture capital rounds tell a stark story of insider privilege.
Let me explain:
Series A investors paid just $0.0955 per token while Series B investors paid $1.00.
When TIA launched to the public at $2.29-$2.50, retail investors were already paying >20x what the earliest VCs paid.
Even with TIA’s catastrophic 95% decline from its peak, Series A investors remain up 14-17x on their initial investment, having seen returns as high as 218x at the February 2024 peak of $20.
This pricing structure means that while retail investors who bought at launch are underwater by 40-60%, every single institutional investor still remains deeply profitable.
The asymmetry is by design, not accident.
That’s supported by a token distribution that heavily favors insiders with 80% allocated to team, investors, and foundation versus just 20% for public participants.
The unlock schedule on these allocations creates predictable selling events:
- October 30, 2024: A massive unlock of 175.59 million TIA tokens represented 80% of the then-circulating supply
- Monthly unlocks continue through 2027, with 30 million tokens releasing monthly through October 2025
- Early backers received 33% of their tokens after year one, with the remaining 67% unlocking during year two
This creates what researchers have estimated as an average 12% inflation rate from unlocks alone during months 24-60 of the project.
The structural selling pressure is not a side effect, it’s literally the primary feature of the tokenomics design.
Things get worse though. Much worse.
The most damning example is @polychaincap, which invested approximately $20 million across Series A and B rounds.
Through the staking rewards loophole (see screenshot below), Polychain already sold over $82 million worth of TIA (achieving a 4x return on investment) before a single one of their primary tokens has unlocked (also see comments for more info on this).
Wow that’s pretty wild, no?
Unfortunately, there is more. Much more.
Celestia launched with an 8% annual inflation rate that decreases by 10% yearly until reaching 1.5%.
This mechanism appears reasonable on paper but becomes predatory when combined with the token distribution.
With only 25% of tokens initially circulating, the 8% inflation effectively adds 33% more tokens to the circulating supply in the first year.
Research modeling shows that this inflation pressure escalates from 1.1 million tokens per month to over 7 million tokens monthly during major unlock periods, and that the network requires > $2 million in monthly fee revenue just to offset this selling pressure (while it currently makes about $200 per day!).
So let’s quickly recap the situation so far:
- High inflation dilutes existing holders at 8% annually
- Massive periodic unlocks flood the market with supply
- Liquid staking rewards from locked tokens provide immediate selling opportunities
What this ultimately means?
They rewarded their early investors and themselves at the expense of retail, and keep dismissing legitimate concerns as “ridiculous FUD” when the token is down >95%.
Mustafa’s post below, claiming all tokens see 95% drawdowns and that critics spread “ridiculous FUD” further reinforces this, showing a worrying indifference for the losses of the people that should ultimately be the ones using the (app)chains built on Celestia.
All just a coincidence?
Possible but unlikely.
Because even when compared to other heavily VC-funded peers, Celestia’s tokenomics stand out as particularly extractive:
- Celestia: 80% insider allocation, 20% public
- Aptos: 49% insider allocation, 51% public
- Ethereum: 83.47% sold to public in crowdsale
- Bitcoin/YFI: 100% fair launch with no insider allocations
Combined with the staking rewards loophole and aggressive unlock schedule, this 80/20 distribution creates a perfect storm for value extraction.
This inevitably leads to a system where retail investors serve primarily as exit liquidity for venture capital funds.
So is it all over for $TIA?
No, but things are not looking great.
There are various proposals aiming to radically alter/improve the tokenomics, including reducing inflation by 33% or abandoning the PoS consensus (where the chain currently heavily overpays for security) entirely. Admissions that the current structure is fundamentally broken.
However, with Series A investors still up 14-17x despite a 95% price decline, the damage to retail has already been done and trust can likely not be repaired.
A price that Celestia (even though largely a B2B business model) will likely pay in the long-term, as the entire ecosystem suffers under a damaged reputation, regardless of the great tech.
That there is literally 0 organic demand for the token or utility beyond governance (which is a meme, especially if 80% of tokens went to insiders) and paying for (almost free) DA makes things even worse.
The counter-thesis to $TIA is $HYPE. No insiders and VCs dumping on retail from day 1. Clear token utility, fueling organic demand, millions in daily holder revenue, and low inflation that is also countered by a baked-in buyback mechanism.
Proof that not "every token" does a -95% from peak.
The key takeaway for builders?
It’s easy to make yourself and your VC friends rich by dumping on retail at an artificial 200x valuation.
But if you’re here to “change the game” or “build for the long-term”, you have to acknowledge that your token is ALSO a core product, and will ALSO define the success of your tech. Regardless of a $100m “war chest” full of VC funds that will be there to pay handsome salaries.
Yet the question remains: how much do you actually care if you already made all the retirement money you could have dreamed of?




72.15K
399

Awawat
same plan as last year, iwo

Awawat
The summer lull has happened every year, even the most bullish ones:
- 2017: alts got crushed vs BTC
- 2019: 13k top and ensuing correction
- 2020: DeFi summer happened because everyone was risk-off majors and everything sucked so farming made sense
- 2021: bearish chop until that Trabucco tweet in July
- 2022: we died
- 2023: chop around 28k
- etc…
Summer is a good time to tactical-retreat in BTC/ETH/stables and expect less from alts.
I don’t think the summer seasonality changes the way the 4 year cycle will play out.
2018 = 2022 = we dead
2019 = 2023 = echo bubble, recovery
2020 = 2024 = constructive & bullish
2021 = 2025 = things get stupid, you sell
It’s a stupidly simple mental framework but so far it has worked well.
Best use of summer is finding the next PEPE or YFI. Second best use is doing cool IRL things.
Enjoy 🐘
56.47K
272
Yearn.finance price performance in USD
The current price of Yearn.finance is $5,061.00. Over the last 24 hours, Yearn.finance has decreased by -0.24%. It currently has a circulating supply of 33,811 YFI and a maximum supply of 36,666 YFI, giving it a fully diluted market cap of $171.22M. At present, Yearn.finance holds the 0 position in market cap rankings. The Yearn.finance/USD price is updated in real-time.
Today
-$12.0000
-0.24%
7 days
+$105.00
+2.11%
30 days
-$467.00
-8.45%
3 months
+$366.00
+7.79%
Popular Yearn.finance conversions
Last updated: 28/06/2025, 00:03
1 YFI to USD | $5,064.00 |
1 YFI to SGD | $6,460.78 |
1 YFI to PHP | ₱286,738.8 |
1 YFI to EUR | €4,318.07 |
1 YFI to IDR | Rp 82,167,775 |
1 YFI to GBP | £3,691.14 |
1 YFI to CAD | $6,910.64 |
1 YFI to AED | AED 18,597.54 |
About Yearn.finance (YFI)
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OKX does not provide investment or asset recommendations. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Please consult your legal/tax/investment professional for questions about your specific circumstances. For further details, please refer to our Terms of Use and Risk Warning. By using the third-party website ("TPW"), you accept that any use of the TPW will be subject to and governed by the terms of the TPW. Unless expressly stated in writing, OKX and its affiliates (“OKX”) are not in any way associated with the owner or operator of the TPW. You agree that OKX is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage and any other consequences arising from your use of the TPW. Please be aware that using a TPW may result in a loss or diminution of your assets. Product may not be available in all jurisdictions.
OKX does not provide investment or asset recommendations. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding digital assets is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Please consult your legal/tax/investment professional for questions about your specific circumstances. For further details, please refer to our Terms of Use and Risk Warning. By using the third-party website ("TPW"), you accept that any use of the TPW will be subject to and governed by the terms of the TPW. Unless expressly stated in writing, OKX and its affiliates (“OKX”) are not in any way associated with the owner or operator of the TPW. You agree that OKX is not responsible or liable for any loss, damage and any other consequences arising from your use of the TPW. Please be aware that using a TPW may result in a loss or diminution of your assets. Product may not be available in all jurisdictions.