Opinion: Mitchell Amador, Founder and CEO of Immunefi
There is an argument that regulation will divide decentralized finance (DeFi) into two separate silos: one regulated and compliant, and the other completely open and accessible to anyone, including anonymous participants.
This argument is obsolete.
Regulatory pressure in 2026 will transform DeFi into a network of interoperable, interconnected ecosystems with distinct risk, compliance and access profiles.
Some tiers will become more compliant and institution-friendly, while others will remain open, permissionless and driven by onchain leverage and market experimentation.
This evolution will not drag DeFi towards TradFi. Rather, it will bring TradFi into the DeFi orbit.
DeFi is already operating in many lanes
DeFi has never operated as a single monolith; operates on several simultaneous compliance levels.
The first lane is permissionless DeFi, where anyone can deploy a contract, provide liquidity, and employ leverage. This is the engine of innovation, where price discovery and stress testing are as public as failures. Permissionless pools do not have Know Your Customer (KYC) features, allow the employ of pseudonyms, and exist because global markets can move faster than regulated institutions.
The next level consists of protocols with built-in security features such as decommissioning policies, governance frameworks, and Oracle security, but without identity requirements. They serve people who want liquidity and profits combined with risk management.
Finally, there is a newer, tightly controlled line where KYC checks, geofencing, and compliance filters are applied at the access point level.
You can still achieve the same basic clever contracts, just with different gateways.
Fluidity trumps isolation
Full isolation of compliant DeFi is unlikely. Capital seeks liquidity, and liquidity seeks composability. This means that regulated lanes will run through infrastructure without requiring a permit.
Institutions entering digital assets will want to access the scale of liquidity that only onchain markets can provide – 24/7 global access, near-instant settlement and a depth that conventional platforms cannot match. The passage of the GENIUS Act, which bans income-producing stablecoins, has already pushed institutional capital towards DeFi protocols in search of profits.
If available liquidity is compelling enough, institutions will tolerate the risk of complexity and innovation. The regulation will not eliminate this incentive.
Security innovation starts in the arena
Institutional and compliant participants care deeply about security, but the center of gravity for security innovation will be in permissionless DeFi.
This may seem counterintuitive considering that over $3.1 billion was lost to hacks and exploits in the first half of 2025 alone.
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Hostile conditions arise precisely where solid defenses are forged. Bug bounties, real-time monitoring tools, and AI-based threat detection were built in a permissionless environment and tested for real-world exploits before any compliance framework was adopted.
This pattern will accelerate. New security models, starting with automated onchain vulnerability scanning, will continue to emerge in open DeFi and will then be standardized and adopted by the institutional side as they prove effective.
The regulation will cement the central role of DeFi
The regulation will certainly not break DeFi. Instead, we will see decentralized finance establish itself at the center of global finance.
The future is certainly not DeFi versus permissionless DeFi because DeFi has the ability to be interoperable. It is a network where open markets generate liquidity and innovation, and regulated players selectively join them. We will therefore see regulatory pressure shape the ecosystem into interconnected tiers, some leaning towards greater compliance and others towards open markets, all linked by a compounding that makes onchain finance uniquely powerful.
This vigorous will inevitably bring TradFi closer to DeFi as institutions seek significantly greater liquidity, speed and efficiency in decentralized markets.
Opinion: Mitchell Amador, Founder and CEO of Immunefi.
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