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Index Coop Isn’t Worried About Enso’s ‘Vampire Attack’

The crypto index-fund builder raised another $2.25 million from big-name backers even before a competing protocol struck.

AccessTimeIconDec 8, 2021 at 2:01 p.m. UTC
Updated Dec 8, 2021 at 3:11 p.m. UTC

Danny is CoinDesk's deputy business editor. He owns BTC, ETH and SOL.

On-chain crypto index fund builder Index Cooperative raised $2.25 million in funding as the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) prepares to fend off another project’s “vampire attack.”

Sequoia Capital India, Blockchain.com Ventures and White Star Capital participated in the funding round. It closed before news broke Tuesday that Enso Finance, a “social trading” competitor, would fork Index Coop and other decentralized finance (DeFi) projects’ code and then incentivize its users to move their assets over.

Success would give Enso Finance a slice of Index Coop’s nearly $500 million pie. Exchange-traded fund-like tokens such as the DeFi Pulse Index, which give its holders broad exposure to DeFi tokens’ price actions, have helped the protocol rack up over $2 million in lifetime fees.

Core contributors at the DAO told CoinDesk they aren’t worried; Index Coop has fended off such “vampire attacks” before, like In April when BasketDAO attacked.

“For the week or two that it was happening, we saw a drop with like 300 users, but I mean, we add probably 400 users in a week. It was kind of just a little blip,” core contributor Simon Judd told CoinDesk.

Across its metaverse, leveraged ETH and leveraged BTC strategies, Index Coop’s family of “funds” hold nearly $420 million in crypto assets. That figure has occasionally eclipsed $500 million but the recent market sell-off pushed it down.

“We’re adding 200, 300, 400, 500 people holding our indexes. And that’s happening regardless of what’s happening in the market,” Judd told CoinDesk. He said that over 31,000 wallets are currently plugged in.

The growth highlights budding demand for crypto-native investment products that mimic traditional vehicles. Passively managed by market conditions, Index Coop’s crypto funds generate $17,222 in daily fees, Judd said.

“In traditional markets passive products make up an outsized share of holdings for investors seeking diversified, no-frills exposure with low fees; we believe a similar trend will take place for crypto,” Anandamoy Roychowdhary, principal at Sequoia India, said in a statement.

Index Coop padded its treasury earlier this year with a $7.7 million investment from Galaxy Digital and 1kx.

CORRECTION (Dec. 8, 15:11 UTC): Index Coop rakes in $17,222 in daily, not annual, fees.


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Danny is CoinDesk's deputy business editor. He owns BTC, ETH and SOL.

CoinDesk - Unknown

Danny is CoinDesk's deputy business editor. He owns BTC, ETH and SOL.