
What to know : Gauntlet's TVL dropped 22.84% over seven days, erasing roughly $380 million in value, with the primary driver being the end of OKX's pre-deposit campaign on Katana rather than broader market stress — the outflows are predominantly stablecoins rotating out of incentive-driven vaults. Despite the sharp number, Gauntlet says the swing is consistent with normal incentive cycle dynamics, pointing to a similar $775 million single-transaction deposit in October 2025 that fully recovered within ten days as evidence that the firm has navigated large capital movements before.
Gauntlet, one of decentralized finance's (DeFi) leading providers for risk management tools, has seen its total value locked (TVL), a measure of the assets deposited across its vaults, fall sharply over the past seven days, dropping 22.84% to $1.325 billion.
That has erased roughly $380 million in dollar-denominated value from a week-ago peak of approximately $1.72 billion, according to DeFiLlama data. The decline accelerated Thursday with a single-day slide of 7.57%.
The primary driver, according to Gauntlet, was the conclusion of OKX's pre-deposit campaign on the DeFi-focused blockchain, Katana. Pre-deposit campaigns — where users are incentivized to park capital ahead of a protocol launch — can produce sharp TVL spikes that unwind quickly once the campaign ends or if a token airdrop occurs. The chart bears this out: Gauntlet's TVL surged sharply around March 2 before reversing just as steeply.
The asset outflows are predominantly stablecoin-based, Gauntlet noted.
The scale of the move is notable given what Gauntlet actually does. Think of it as a risk management consultancy for DeFi — the firm helps protocols understand, for example, what percentage of a borrower's collateral would be at risk of liquidation if ETH fell 30% overnight. It doesn't hold funds itself; instead, it sets the parameters that govern how lending markets and vaults behave.
Its TVL is a measure of the capital held within systems that Gauntlet is responsible for safeguarding. When that number falls sharply, it can reflect either market stress or, as in this case, the mechanical end of an incentive program.
Gauntlet, which received a $1 billion valuation in 2022, currently manages three vaults — essentially pooled deposit accounts where users lock up capital in exchange for a yield. The vaults hold USDC, BTC, and WETH, respectively. The USDC vault is the most liquid, offering an APY of 4.86%, while the others offer between 2% and 2.3%. The outflows could also reflect DeFi traders rotating capital to higher-yielding alternatives — SOL-based protocols like Jito, for example, currently offer 5.69%.
Gauntlet has navigated large capital swings before. In October 2025, its USDT vaults absorbed a $775 million single-transaction deposit — a 40x TVL increase — and recovered to pre-deposit levels within ten days through active reallocation and new collateral market additions. The firm framed this week's outflows in similar terms, noting that incentive campaign endings, token generation events, and shifts in market conditions regularly produce short-period swings in either direction.
"Institutional risk managers manage through these events," the firm said in a statement to CoinDesk. “Working to maintain rates, preserve capital supplied to vaults, and adjusting to market conditions.”
Oliver Knight contributed reporting to this story.
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