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Recently, I've seen quite a few yield aggregators presenting APY in an attractive way. Frankly, my first thought isn't "how much can I earn," but rather "who's actually getting the money behind this APY into their contracts." Often, the aggregator is just a routing layer; the real counterparty might be a new liquidity pool, a lending vault, or even an upgradable smart contract logic... If any part of that chain encounters an issue, you simply won't have time to react.
I used to think I was cautious, but a while ago, I chased after high yields and found that assets had been re-packaged and re-staked multiple times, with paths as convoluted as a travel transfer, with nonces stamped so many times my hand was sore. Even more outrageous is that now, with testnet incentives and point expectations, everyone is betting on whether the mainnet will issue tokens. Many projects rely on this sentiment to boost TVL; the APY looks like a benefit, but it's more like using an uncertain future to cover today's risks.
Anyway, I’m currently doing two things: checking contract permissions (can it be upgraded or transferred at will), and seeing if the yield source is purely supported by "new funds + point expectations." Take it slow if needed—at least don’t become someone else’s counterparty.