Source: Blockworks
Original Title: A sleeper in the perps category
Original Link: https://blockworks.co/news/boros-sleeper-perps
Market Overview
Lighter’s LIT token launch marks a significant moment in the ongoing battle for perpetual futures market share. The perps market has intensified with three major players competing aggressively: Lighter leading with over $200 billion in volume over the past 30 days, followed by Aster ($172 billion) and Hyperliquid ($161 billion). However, Hyperliquid remains the revenue leader, generating approximately $47 million over the same period despite operating without active incentives.
The critical question is whether Lighter can maintain its volume lead post-launch, especially given speculation that recent growth has been driven by points farming. According to the team’s announcement, LIT operates on a token structure where 50% goes to ecosystem development and 50% to team/investors, with 25% of total supply airdropped to points holders.
Current metrics show LIT trading at a $695 million circulating market cap and $2.8 billion FDV, with the protocol generating $8.76 million in revenue over the past 30 days ($105 million annualized). This implies a P/S multiple of approximately 7x and FDV/Sales of 27x.
The Overlooked Beneficiary: Pendle and Boros
While market attention focuses on the Hyperliquid versus Lighter debate, Pendle emerges as a structural beneficiary of perpetual futures growth regardless of market winner. Pendle’s Boros protocol, launched in August 2025, introduces a new onchain financial primitive: interest rate swaps for yield trading.
How Boros Works
Boros functions as a specialized derivatives exchange with two key differences from traditional perps:
Underlying Asset: Instead of betting on asset price movements, traders bet on yield movements
Expiry Structure: Unlike perpetuals, Boros markets have defined maturity dates
The protocol enables trading through Yield Units (YU), similar to Pendle v2’s Yield Tokens, representing future yield of underlying assets until maturity.
Long Position Example: A trader long 2 YU-BTCUSDC commits to paying a fixed rate (e.g., 10% APR) while receiving underlying funding rate payments equivalent to a 2 BTC position.
Short Position: The trader commits to paying the floating underlying APR in exchange for a fixed rate determined at entry.
Performance Metrics
Boros has demonstrated strong early traction:
Peak Open Interest: $245 million (December 26, 2025)
Current OI: ~$88 million
Cumulative Volume: ~$6.8 billion since launch
Median Monthly Volume: ~$1.5 billion over past four months
The protocol generates revenue through two channels: (1) flat fees on implied APR for swaps (market-dependent) and (2) 0.2% flat fee on fixed APR side during settlement. Liquidation fees remain negligible at ~$1,300 since inception.
Venue Expansion
Boros launched with BTCUSDT and ETHUSDT markets on one major exchange but has expanded significantly:
Venues: Now operational across multiple major exchanges
Assets: Expanded beyond initial offerings to include HYPE and others
OI Distribution: Nearly evenly split across venues (approximately 37%, 35%, and 29%)
ETH-USD remains the largest market by OI, followed by BTC-USD and HYPE-USD.
Why Boros Matters for Perpetuals Growth
Boros benefits from perps market maturation without dependency on any single venue. As sophisticated traders enter the space, they demand advanced strategies:
Hedging funding payments on long positions
Hedging funding receivables on short positions
Implementing cash-and-carry trades
Managing complex multi-venue strategies
As perpetuals gain regulatory acceptance and traditional institutions trade RWA-based derivatives (equities, commodities), demand for yield unit trading will expand dramatically across asset classes.
Long-Term Potential
Currently, Boros represents less than 5% of Pendle v2 revenue. However, it is positioned as the protocol’s most important growth vector and may eventually rival or exceed v2 revenues over time. The protocol’s design enables seamless expansion beyond funding rates to stablecoin yields, money market rates, LST yields, and beyond—establishing DeFi’s default interest rate derivatives venue.
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A Sleeper in the Perps Category: Why Pendle's Boros Matters
Source: Blockworks Original Title: A sleeper in the perps category Original Link: https://blockworks.co/news/boros-sleeper-perps
Market Overview
Lighter’s LIT token launch marks a significant moment in the ongoing battle for perpetual futures market share. The perps market has intensified with three major players competing aggressively: Lighter leading with over $200 billion in volume over the past 30 days, followed by Aster ($172 billion) and Hyperliquid ($161 billion). However, Hyperliquid remains the revenue leader, generating approximately $47 million over the same period despite operating without active incentives.
The critical question is whether Lighter can maintain its volume lead post-launch, especially given speculation that recent growth has been driven by points farming. According to the team’s announcement, LIT operates on a token structure where 50% goes to ecosystem development and 50% to team/investors, with 25% of total supply airdropped to points holders.
Current metrics show LIT trading at a $695 million circulating market cap and $2.8 billion FDV, with the protocol generating $8.76 million in revenue over the past 30 days ($105 million annualized). This implies a P/S multiple of approximately 7x and FDV/Sales of 27x.
The Overlooked Beneficiary: Pendle and Boros
While market attention focuses on the Hyperliquid versus Lighter debate, Pendle emerges as a structural beneficiary of perpetual futures growth regardless of market winner. Pendle’s Boros protocol, launched in August 2025, introduces a new onchain financial primitive: interest rate swaps for yield trading.
How Boros Works
Boros functions as a specialized derivatives exchange with two key differences from traditional perps:
The protocol enables trading through Yield Units (YU), similar to Pendle v2’s Yield Tokens, representing future yield of underlying assets until maturity.
Long Position Example: A trader long 2 YU-BTCUSDC commits to paying a fixed rate (e.g., 10% APR) while receiving underlying funding rate payments equivalent to a 2 BTC position.
Short Position: The trader commits to paying the floating underlying APR in exchange for a fixed rate determined at entry.
Performance Metrics
Boros has demonstrated strong early traction:
The protocol generates revenue through two channels: (1) flat fees on implied APR for swaps (market-dependent) and (2) 0.2% flat fee on fixed APR side during settlement. Liquidation fees remain negligible at ~$1,300 since inception.
Venue Expansion
Boros launched with BTCUSDT and ETHUSDT markets on one major exchange but has expanded significantly:
ETH-USD remains the largest market by OI, followed by BTC-USD and HYPE-USD.
Why Boros Matters for Perpetuals Growth
Boros benefits from perps market maturation without dependency on any single venue. As sophisticated traders enter the space, they demand advanced strategies:
As perpetuals gain regulatory acceptance and traditional institutions trade RWA-based derivatives (equities, commodities), demand for yield unit trading will expand dramatically across asset classes.
Long-Term Potential
Currently, Boros represents less than 5% of Pendle v2 revenue. However, it is positioned as the protocol’s most important growth vector and may eventually rival or exceed v2 revenues over time. The protocol’s design enables seamless expansion beyond funding rates to stablecoin yields, money market rates, LST yields, and beyond—establishing DeFi’s default interest rate derivatives venue.