Aave Labs launched Stable Vaults, a DeFi yield product that lets fintech wallets, exchanges and payment apps offer returns on stablecoin deposits without users interacting directly with crypto infrastructure.
Aave Labs launched Stable Vaults, a DeFi yield product that lets fintech wallets, exchanges and payment apps offer returns on stablecoin deposits without users interacting directly with crypto infrastructure.

Aave Labs, the developer behind the largest decentralized lending protocol, launched Stable Vaults on Wednesday, a product that lets fintech companies embed yield-bearing stablecoin accounts without requiring users to interact directly with crypto infrastructure.
The vaults let wallets, exchanges and payment providers offer returns on USDC, USDT and Aave's native GHO stablecoin through a single integration. Behind the scenes, deposits are automatically allocated across approved DeFi lending strategies, with the system managing liquidity, capital allocation and yield distribution.
"Stable Vaults make predictable stablecoin earning simple to plug into any fintech application," Stani Kulechov, founder of Aave Labs, said in a statement.
The launch comes as stablecoins become increasingly embedded in everyday payments and digital banking. More fintech firms are adopting stablecoins for cross-border money movement, and many are seeking ways to let customers earn returns on idle balances without navigating crypto-native applications. Vaults have emerged as the infrastructure layer that automates this process, moving deposits between lending and yield strategies based on predefined rules.
Aave is entering a market that rival Morpho has already begun capturing. Coinbase in June launched a high-yield savings vault for USDC deposits powered by Morpho and Ethena that has surpassed $200 million in assets, according to the exchange. Robinhood followed in July with a similar product for Global Dollar stablecoins using vaults built by Morpho and Maple Finance.
Stable Vaults are designed as open infrastructure, allowing companies to deploy their own vault and determine how it operates. The product will also underpin Aave's upcoming savings app, currently in test mode and expected to launch on Apple's App Store.
The move positions Aave to compete for a share of the fast-growing market for yield-bearing stablecoin products. With Coinbase and Robinhood already live with competing offerings, the question is whether Aave's open-infrastructure approach can attract fintech partners faster than Morpho's existing integrations.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.