Recently, I’ve been looking into restaking and shared security systems—the returns seem to stack on top of each other, and it’s easy to get an itch to jump in. But honestly, what you’re stacking isn’t interest; it’s the sources of risk: the underlying assets, the protocol logic, operational permissions, and external dependencies (bridges, oracles) are all tied together. If any link goes haywire, it can swallow up that “extra bit of yield” in one go.



A couple of days ago, the cross-chain bridge had another incident. My first reaction wasn’t to blame the hackers—it was to feel grateful that I didn’t throw my liquidity into those kinds of setups where you can’t transfer without going through the bridge. And then there was the round of abnormal oracle prices—everyone was shouting “wait for confirmation,” but really the market was quietly teaching you: don’t blindly trust automation; at critical moments, you still need human-driven stop-losses and position reductions. Anyway, my current principle is: only talk about stacking yields when you can understand them, when you can exit, and when you can withstand the worst-case scenario—otherwise, you’re just stacking illusions.
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