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Project Spotlight: Flamingo Finance, China’s Full Stack DeFi Protocol

DATE POSTED:October 6, 2020

Flamingo Finance is a “full-stack” DeFi protocol built on the NEO blockchain, according to marketing materials. Upon further inspection, however, it better resembles a mishmash of top DeFi protocols originally built on Ethereum. 

But instead of making a home on the number two network, Flamingo draws liquidity from other major networks thanks to interoperable protocol PolyNetwork.

What it lacks in innovation, it makes up for in the makeup of its audience. Already the protocol has locked in $1.6 billion in value, proving China’s massive appetite for cryptocurrencies and DeFi. 

What Is Flamingo Finance?

For those who have been following the DeFi sector in crypto, Flamingo isn’t difficult to understand. 

The project is built on five specific pillars, all of which are already in existence in one form or another on Ethereum. Flamingo also offers a native governance token, FLM, which will be discussed shortly. 

Flamingo Documentation (1)Source: Flamingo Documentation

The first pillar is called Wrapper. It is not dissimilar from popular DeFi projects like Synthetix and Ren, as it allows Flamingo users to create various “n-tokens” pegged to different assets. Supported tokens include Neo, Ontology, Ethereum, and Cosmos-based blockchains like Kava and Terra. Flamingo will soon offer support for Bitcoin.

The second pillar is called Swap and is identical to popular “Constant Product Market Makers,” like Uniswap. The key difference is that Flamingo’s swap only supports NEP-5 tokens, Neo’s equivalent to Ethereum’s ERC-20 token standard. 

Like Uniswap, users are also required to supply two-sided liquidity, must pay a 0.3% trading fee (which is distributed to liquidity providers), and use a trading router to improve trade matching. 

The third pillar is called Vault and imitates yEarn Finance’s yVault function. Users can stake NEP-5 tokens into the vault and earn the FLM governance token as part of the project’s liquidity mining event, called “Mint Rush.” The event ended on Sept. 30. 

Flamincome borrows from @iearnfinance to start, not because we don't have original strategies, but we think it's more important to ensure our seed users having a peace of mind. I am still thinking of a way to express our gratitude to the Yearn community. Any ideas?

— Da Hongfei (@dahongfei) September 19, 2020

Through Vault, Flamingo users can mint a USD-pegged stablecoin called FUSD. Users who mint FUSD will be rewarded in FLM proportionate to the amount minted. This feature is not currently available and will go live on Oct. 28, 2020.

In November, the team will launch the fourth pillar called Perp, a derivatives platform allowing traders to margin trade their NEP-5 tokens up to 10x. And in December, the team will launch their DAO, through which FLM token holders can vote on protocol updates and other governance operations.

Flamingo Documentation (2)Source: Flamingo Documentation

At the time of press, the following pillars are active: Wrapper, Vault, and Swap.

The very first AMM-based DEX on Neo, Flamingo #Swap goes live. FLM will no longer be distributed to single-asset stakers. Users may stake #LPTokens from below trading pairs in the Vault to continue receiving FLM rewards. https://t.co/zFw5sZvBkj

— Da Hongfei (@dahongfei) October 5, 2020

FLM Tokeneconomics

Based on the project’s documentation, there will be 150,000,000 FLM in circulation. This supply isn’t capped, however. Users can earn these tokens at each phase of the Flamingo’s rollout by participating in various network activities. 

The most recent activity, called Mint Rush, announced the launch of the first phase of Flamingo. The primary function of this event was to entice ERC-20 token holders to add liquidity to the protocol. The bridge between various Ethereum assets and Flamingo is a tool called Flamingcome. 

Users can stake their assets in the tool to earn attractive APYs, n-tokens for interacting in Flamingo, plus FLM tokens. The mechanics of Flamincome allow for further iterations behind the Mint Rush event. Unpacking an example transaction will make this tool more clear. 

Users holding an ERC-20 token like USDC can do two things in Flamincome to earn on these tokens. The first leverages the “Optimizer” feature, which turns USDC into an interest-bearing “f-token” called fUSDC. Users can then use f-tokens like fUSDC to interact with the second module called “Normalizer.” 

It is through the Normalizer that f-tokens are turned into n-tokens. The latter can be used within the Flamingo ecosystem.

Flamingo Documentation (2)Source: Flamingo Documentation

As for the token’s price action, it resembles many yield farming distribution mechanisms. FLM entered the market at a high of $1.59, until plummeting to a current price of $0.37 per token. 

Though there are still several different phases to unlock according to the team’s roadmap, it is hard to imagine the launch of leveraged trading and a DAO will do much for price action. The token has also already been listed on large centralized exchanges like Binance, OKEX, and FTX Exchange. 

Binance and OKEX also hosted Flamingo and its FLM token on their respective liquidity mining platforms. 

As of Sept. 28, the project boasted nearly as much value locked in as powerhouse Uniswap. 

Identifying Flamingo’s Red Flags

The project has earned criticism from members of the Ethereum community for Flamingo’s vampire-like characteristics. Like Compound Finance’s Robert Leshner, critics described it as a SushiSwap attack, but for the entire Ethereum community. 

IMO it's the first credible, wholesale blockchain-scale "vampire" attempt.

The success or failure of the project has extremely important ramifications for how we think of Ethereum's network effect & composability lock-in.

Will it work?