At the start of this series, we set out to answer a simple question: What is actually driving trading activity on Stabull outside the UI? What we uncovered wasAt the start of this series, we set out to answer a simple question: What is actually driving trading activity on Stabull outside the UI? What we uncovered was

From Discovery to Trajectory: What This Means for Stabull Going Into 2026

2026/04/20 05:02
4 min read
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By Jamie McCormick, Co-CMO, Stabull Labs

The final article in the 15 part “Deconstructing DeFi” Series.

This final article pulls together what that means — and why it matters in 2026.

What we learned by tracing real transactions

By following real, non-UI transactions end-to-end, several things became clear:

  • Volume is increasingly driven by execution paths, not interfaces
  • Liquidity is being selected by software, not sentiment
  • Fees are being generated by reliability, not incentives

Bots, solvers, and aggregators are not experimenting anymore. They are routing through Stabull because it works.

Once that happens, volume stops being episodic and starts becoming structural.

Why this creates a different growth curve

Traditional DeFi growth often looks like this:

  • launch incentives
  • volume spike
  • incentives end
  • volume fades

What we are seeing on Stabull follows a different pattern:

  • liquidity becomes usable
  • execution systems test it
  • reliability is proven
  • routing increases
  • volume compounds

This explains why growth appears gradual at first, then accelerates.

By the time volume shows up clearly on dashboards, most of the real work has already been done by integrators, solvers, and automated systems quietly adopting the protocol.

The importance of being “boring infrastructure”

Stabull is not trying to win attention through novelty.

Its value lies in being:

  • predictable
  • price-aligned
  • composable
  • resistant to failure

These are not qualities that generate hype — but they are exactly what execution systems optimise for.

In DeFi, infrastructure that behaves consistently tends to get reused. Reuse is what creates compounding volume.

Why this matters for LPs

For liquidity providers, this shift changes the nature of yield.

Fees are no longer dependent on:

  • retail sentiment
  • UI traffic
  • marketing cycles

Instead, yield increasingly reflects:

  • how often liquidity is used
  • how deeply it sits inside execution paths
  • how reliable it is under automation

This is a quieter form of yield, but often a more durable one.

Why this matters for issuers

For issuers, being listed on Stabull is no longer just about visibility.

It is about:

  • placing assets inside the execution fabric of DeFi
  • enabling programmatic usage
  • supporting cross-venue price alignment
  • generating real transactional demand

As we’ve seen, even modest liquidity can support meaningful volume when it sits on active routes.

Why this matters for the protocol

For Stabull itself, this marks a transition.

From:

  • a UI-driven DEX for stablecoins and RWAs

To:

  • a multi-chain execution venue embedded in DeFi workflows

This transition does not require explosive growth. It requires steady integration, reliability, and time.

Those conditions are now in place.

Looking ahead to 2026

None of the activity described in this series depends on future promises.

It is already happening:

  • across three chains
  • across multiple asset types
  • across independent participants

As additional integrations come online and execution volume increases across DeFi more broadly, Stabull’s role is likely to deepen rather than fragment.

The work done so far is beginning to compound.

A closing thought

When people ask where DeFi volume comes from, the answer is often framed in terms of users.

What this series shows is that usage increasingly comes from systems.

Stabull is becoming useful to those systems.

And once infrastructure becomes useful, it tends to stick.

About the Author

Jamie McCormick is Co-Chief Marketing Officer at Stabull Finance, where he has been working for over two years on positioning the protocol within the evolving DeFi ecosystem.

He is also the founder of Bitcoin Marketing Team, established in 2014 and recognised as Europe’s oldest specialist crypto marketing agency. Over the past decade, the agency has worked with a wide range of projects across the digital asset and Web3 landscape.

Jamie first became involved in crypto in 2013 and has a long-standing interest in Bitcoin and Ethereum. Over the last two years, his focus has increasingly shifted toward understanding the mechanics of decentralised finance, particularly how on-chain infrastructure is used in practice rather than in theory.

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