SecondSwap, a decentralized exchange for locked and vesting digital assets, recently announced its expansion to the Avalanche blockchain ecosystem after a successful Ethereum launch earlier in the year. The integration is designed to provide a transparent, on-chain secondary market for tokens that are still subject to vesting schedules or early investor lockups.
This step comes as decentralized finance continues to grapple with one of its most persistent inefficiencies: illiquid locked tokens. The issue presents serious challenges that the market is only now beginning to address. Early backers often find it impossible to adjust or fully exit their holdings when market conditions turn negative. By some estimates, locked token investors suffer an average drawdown of around 50% on their positions over the past year, while some face unrealized losses as high as 88%.
These inefficiencies ripple beyond individual portfolios. Unlock events can trigger extreme volatility, as large tranches of tokens suddenly enter circulation. When many holders are eager to sell, this surge in supply can depress prices – sometimes even before the unlock itself, as the event looms over market sentiment.
To access liquidity early, some investors resort to the over-the-counter (OTC) market. But these private sales often come with deep discounts, high intermediary fees, and a lack of pricing transparency. Settlement risk remains high, and buyers tend to hold the upper hand in what are usually opaque, fragmented negotiations.
A Tokenomist report suggests that more than $100 billion worth of tokens across major blockchains remain locked in vesting arrangements. Naturally, this represents a vast reservoir of untapped liquidity. SecondSwap’s latest deployment on Avalanche aims to access this liquidity by bringing these transactions out of opaque over-the-counter deals and onto a transparent, on-chain marketplace.
The move also reflects a broader DeFi trend, with multiple projects now tackling the problem of illiquid locked tokens from different angles. Taking a more infrastructure-oriented approach is Diffuse, a zkServerless protocol that enables locked assets to participate in restaking and lending ecosystems without unlocking them.
Together, the models proposed by SecondSwap and Diffuse reflect a growing shift in DeFi – from passively holding locked assets to securely activating their utility.
Diffuse’s Collateral Abstraction: A Parallel Path to Unlock Utility
Diffuse recently partnered with the Symbiotic ecosystem to implement what it calls a “Collateral Abstraction,” a novel framework intended to recycle locked collateral across chains. This approach targets the same core issue as SecondSwap but from an infrastructure and cross-chain perspective rather than a marketplace standpoint. Here’s how Diffuse’s model works, and why it could reshape how locked assets function in DeFi:
Unlocking Value Without Unlocking Tokens
Collateral Abstraction allows assets that are locked or staked in one context to be abstracted as collateral in another context. This means that tokens confined to one particular chain or protocol can secure additional DeFi activities elsewhere without being moved or unbound. Diffuse Collateral, the protocol’s flagship product, lets users maximize their assets’ utility without relocating them.
For example, liquidity provider tokens, staked governance coins, or L2 assets that would otherwise sit idle can be contributed to shared security or restaking networks (like Symbiotic) without unwrapping or giving up custody. In return, holders can earn extra yield amounting to an additional 2–5% APY (according to Diffuse’s figures) on top of the existing rewards while retaining the original position and its yield.
From Fragmentation to Interoperability
A driving force behind Diffuse’s model is solving the fragmentation of liquidity across chains. As of early 2025, over $25 billion in assets are locked on Ethereum Layer-2 networks alone but are mostly isolated within ecosystems like Arbitrum, Optimism, and zkSync. These networks improved speed and cost, but often at the expense of cross-chain composability.
Assets locked in an L2 lending pool typically cannot be utilized on another chain without going through risky bridges or wrappers. Diffuse’s Collateral Abstraction tackles this by providing a secure interoperability layer. “Verifiable data” and “trustless interoperability” are the two pillars of its design.
In practical terms, Diffuse uses a combination of zero-knowledge proofs and secure enclaves to prove facts about one chain on another, without involving custodial bridges or traditional oracles. The need for such trust-minimized solutions is highlighted by the large amount of losses from cross-chain exploits. More than $2.5 billion has been lost to bridge and oracle hacks as of early 2025. The path forward isn’t more bridges—it’s better proof. And that’s exactly where Diffuse is building.
Margin Trading and Cross-Chain Lending Potential
Margin trading use cases can become feasible. If a user’s tokens are locked or staked in one protocol, Diffuse could allow them to borrow against those as collateral on another platform. This would enable leveraged positions without unstaking.
Likewise, cross-chain lending protocols stand to benefit. Diffuse’s team suggests that capital locked in siloed pools “could support broader… cross-chain lending protocols if the infrastructure allowed it.” The Collateral Abstraction model essentially turns the myriad pockets of liquidity across chains into a unified pool of collateral that can be deployed wherever the best opportunities arise.
“What’s most exciting is that this isn’t just about optimizing existing yield—it’s about introducing entirely new asset types to shared security and unlocking revenue streams that were previously unavailable,” explains Vadim Makovsky, CEO of Diffuse.
Toward a More Capital-Efficient DeFi Ecosystem
Both SecondSwap and Diffuse reflect strong industry demand for the ability to unlock liquidity without unlocking tokens. However, they approach the problem from different angles, one through creating a transparent market for vested assets while the other takes an infrastructure-based approach through cross-chain collateral. Regardless of method, the two appear to share a vision of making capital more efficient.
SecondSwap’s on-chain exchange could reduce the “unlock shock” that has historically rattled token markets by distributing liquidity over time and participants, while giving early investors a compliant way to realize value before vesting periods end. Diffuse’s approach hints at a future where “locked” assets are anything but idle, where staked or vested tokens can power loans, trades, and shared security in parallel.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.