DeFi is entering an uncomfortable but necessary phase. After years of artificial APYs, aggressive emissions, and fragile narratives, capital —especially the more patient— is starting to ask different questions. It is no longer enough to have “high yield”; now it matters where it comes from, how much risk it takes on, and whether it can survive an adverse market. In that context, Falcon Finance (FF) starts to make sense.
Falcon does not present itself as a machine for explosive returns nor as a trendy experiment. Its proposal is colder and, precisely for that reason, more interesting: real performance backed by economic activity on-chain, not by token inflation. The protocol's returns come from concrete sources such as loans, liquidity provision, and commissions from the system itself. This reduces dependence on emissions and limits dilution, one of the major problems that has destroyed value in DeFi during previous cycles.