Recently, I've been looking at LSTs and the stack of "additional yield" from re-staking, but I find myself wanting to slow down... To be honest, profits are unlikely to grow out of thin air; they either come from someone paying security or service fees, or they are a premium for new risks: contracts, liquidation, de-pegging, cross-chain bridges—those old tricks—or governance making snap parameter changes. The more assets are layered on top of each other, the more it resembles stacking failure points as well.



Another small feeling: many on-chain data tools and tagging systems are criticized for being outdated and can even be misleading. I agree to some extent, so I prefer to be a bit slower, observe a few more days of contract interactions and fund flows, and mark suspicious activity early. Earning a little less is okay, as long as I avoid getting caught off guard. Anyway, I plan to slow down first.
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