Liquidity as a commitment, not a guess.
CommitLabs is building core DeFi infrastructure that transforms passive liquidity into enforceable, attestable, and composable on-chain commitments.
Instead of depositing funds blindly into protocols, users define explicit rules for how their liquidity behaves — including duration, risk tolerance, and exit conditions — and the protocol enforces those rules cryptographically.
In today’s DeFi ecosystem:
- Liquidity is highly volatile and unpredictable
- Protocols rely on inflationary emissions to retain capital
- LP tokens provide no guarantees about duration or behavior
- There is no way to measure or price liquidity reliability
- Sudden liquidity exits cause cascading failures
Liquidity is treated as temporary capital, not infrastructure.
CommitLabs introduces a new primitive called Liquidity Commitments.
A liquidity commitment is a cryptographically enforced agreement that specifies:
- What assets are provided
- For how long the liquidity is committed
- Acceptable risk and drawdown limits
- Exit and slashing conditions
- Expected fee behavior
These commitments are enforced by smart contracts and represented as Commitment NFTs, which can be verified, reused, and composed across protocols.
Users commit liquidity under explicit rules instead of depositing funds without guarantees.
Each commitment defines:
- Duration (e.g., 30 / 60 / 90 days)
- Risk tolerance
- Early exit penalties
- Allocation constraints
Each commitment is minted as an NFT that represents:
- Locked capital
- Commitment parameters
- Historical performance
- Attestation history
These NFTs are transferable, composable, and usable across DeFi.
The protocol continuously verifies commitment health:
- Volatility exposure
- Fee generation
- Drawdown events
- Rule compliance
These attestations are immutable and form a public reliability record.
Commitments can be transformed into:
- Risk tranches
- Collateralized assets
- Secondary market instruments
- Protocol-specific liquidity guarantees
This allows liquidity to be reused without being withdrawn.
Alice wants to deploy $100,000 in DeFi with predictable behavior.
Instead of depositing into a single pool, Alice chooses one of the following commitment types:
- Duration: 30 days
- Max loss: 2%
- Conservative allocation
- Lower but stable yield
- Duration: 60 days
- Max loss: 8%
- Adaptive allocation
- Medium yield
- Duration: 90 days
- No loss protection
- Highest yield potential
- Early exit penalties
Once committed:
- Alice receives a Commitment NFT
- Her liquidity is allocated dynamically within her rules
- Commitment health is continuously attested
- The NFT can be reused as collateral or liquidity proof
At maturity:
- Funds are settled automatically
- The NFT is archived on-chain as a permanent record
Existing systems offer:
- Deposits without guarantees
- LP tokens without reliability
- Emissions-driven liquidity
CommitLabs introduces:
- Time-bound liquidity logic
- Enforceable liquidity behavior
- Measurable liquidity reliability
- Reusable liquidity infrastructure
This shifts DeFi from incentive-driven liquidity to commitment-driven liquidity.
The protocol is designed to be chain-agnostic and works especially well on networks with:
- Low transaction fees
- Deterministic smart contracts
- Strong composability
- Payment-focused infrastructure
Initial development targets Stellar (Soroban), with future expansion to other ecosystems.
CommitLabs is designed without inflationary emissions.
Revenue sources include:
- Commitment creation fees
- Attestation verification fees
- Commitment transformation fees
- Protocol integrations and licensing
For users:
- Predictable risk
- Composable liquidity
- Better capital efficiency
For protocols:
- Reliable liquidity
- Lower bootstrapping costs
- Reduced volatility risk
For ecosystems:
- Sticky capital
- Sustainable growth
- Long-term infrastructure value
CommitLabs is in early development.
Initial milestones:
- Commitment NFT standard
- Core commitment enforcement contracts
- Attestation engine
- Reference AMM integration
MIT