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The heated debate over Aave's "Token-Share Rights": Why is the community's call for transparent audits growing stronger?
As a historically significant protocol in the decentralized lending sector, Aave has recently been thrust back into the spotlight due to internal governance disputes over the distribution of “token” versus “equity” rights. This is not merely a technical upgrade vote but a profound contest over the essence of DeFi protocol ownership.
From Aave Labs’ proposal of an aggressive new framework to community KOLs calling for “transparent audits” and “split voting,” this event, dubbed the “Token-Equity Rights” dispute, is reshaping AAVE’s valuation logic. Although the market holds expectations for a revaluation of the AAVE token price, investor sentiment remains oscillating between optimism and caution until governance transparency issues are addressed.
Core Proposal: A Battle of “Rights Ceding” and “Fund Claims”
The controversy began with a recent governance proposal from Aave Labs titled “Aave Will Win.” Its core content is highly “revolutionary”: Aave Labs commits to transferring 100% of protocol revenue generated by all Aave-branded products to the Aave DAO treasury, and to transferring related intellectual property and trademarks to a newly established independent foundation.
On the surface, this appears to be a significant concession from the development team to the community, embodying the “token holder as shareholder” logic. However, what instantly “disarmed” the community was Labs’ subsequent demand for compensation: as a condition for transitioning into a “pure technology service provider,” Labs requests $25 million in stablecoins for operations and 75,000 AAVE tokens as incentives. It is estimated that the stablecoin portion alone accounts for 42% of the DAO’s non-AAVE reserves, with a total request approaching $50.7 million—about 31.5% of the entire treasury.
This is the crux of the “Token-Equity Rights” dispute: when the development team cedes “equity-like” product profits, they simultaneously seek a hefty “service fee” from the “token rights” holders. Does this mean the team is attempting to cash out from the treasury through another method?
Community Divisions: From “Optimistic Revaluation” to “Audit Outcry”
The proposal quickly sparked polarized reactions within the Aave community.
One faction, led by Austin Barack, founder of Relayer Capital, is bullish on AAVE’s price prospects. He believes that as the uncertainty over AAVE’s value share diminishes, investors will rationally see the token price rise again. After all, 100% revenue going to the treasury clears obstacles for AAVE’s valuation as a “governance + dividend” token.
Conversely, another group, represented by Marczeller, founder of Aave Chan Initiative (ACI), issued stern skepticism. Marczeller pointed out major flaws in the proposal, calling it a “disguised cash-out attempt.” His concerns mainly focus on the following points, which also underpin the community’s call for “transparent audits”:
Price Dynamics: Liquidity Pressure Under Bullish Expectations
As of February 14, 2026, according to Gate data, AAVE is priced at $112.36. Despite a modest 2.30% increase in the past 24 hours and a 7.24% rise over the past week—outperforming Bitcoin and Ethereum—market data reveal conflicting sentiments.
On-chain data shows continued selling pressure. Glassnode indicates net inflows into exchanges, suggesting some investors prefer to transfer AAVE to exchanges for selling rather than accumulation. This reflects that, despite the theoretical positive impact of the “100% revenue to treasury” governance progress, whales and retail investors remain wary of the “$50 million outflow” risk and the potential premature weakening of V3.
Technically, AAVE is currently hovering above the Fibonacci support at around $109. If the community governance can move toward greater transparency and enforce audits, the price could break through the short-term resistance at $119. Conversely, if governance disputes persist and hinder V4’s progress, AAVE may test lower liquidity levels again.
Summary
The “Token-Equity Rights” dispute at Aave is essentially a pain point in the evolution of DeFi from unregulated growth to institutionalization. For observers from centralized exchanges like Gate, this case offers valuable insights:
Although Aave Labs has made concessions by agreeing to transfer 100% of revenue, key issues remain unresolved: “who audits,” “how to audit,” and “the pace of fund disbursement.” The community awaits convincing answers.
For AAVE investors, this ongoing contest may be the best window for observation. If the DAO successfully implements mandatory third-party audits and ensures the newly established foundation remains truly independent of the development team, AAVE’s valuation logic will be fundamentally reconstructed—it will no longer be just a governance token but a “yield-bearing asset” supported by hundreds of billions in lending market cash flows.
In the world of DeFi, code is law, but transparency is the foundation of trust. The outcome of this “Token-Equity Rights” dispute will not only determine Aave V4’s future but also set a benchmark for how to balance “developer incentives” and “community sovereignty” across the industry.