Tuesday Nov 11 2025 05:10
4 min
The crypto community woke up to a significant surge in UNI's price, nearly 40%, driving a broader rally in the DeFi sector. The catalyst for this surge is Uniswap's announcement of plans to activate a "fee switch". Hayden Adams, the founder of Uniswap, has proposed this, centering around the long-discussed concept of a “fee switch.” While this idea is not new to the Uniswap community, having been floated around seven times in the past two years, this time feels different.
This time, the proposal comes directly from Hayden Adams and extends beyond just a fee switch to include other measures like token burning and the merging of Labs and the Foundation. Several key stakeholders have already voiced their support, and prediction markets indicate a high probability, 79%, of the proposal passing. However, why has this seemingly simple concept faced such resistance in the past?
The fee switch mechanism is relatively common in the DeFi space. For instance, Aave successfully activated its fee switch in 2025, using a “buyback + distribution” model to allocate protocol revenue to repurchase AAVE tokens, driving the token price from $180 to $231, an annualized gain of 75%. Other protocols like Ethena, Raydium, Curve, and Usual have also seen significant success with fee switches, providing examples of sustainable token economics for the DeFi industry. Given these successful precedents, why has Uniswap struggled to implement a similar mechanism?
Here, we must mention the role of a16z, a venture capital firm that has played a critical role in Uniswap's history. Given that the quorum typically required in Uniswap is relatively low, usually around 40 million UNI being sufficient to reach the voting threshold, a16z previously wielded significant influence over voting outcomes by controlling approximately 55 million UNI tokens. They have consistently opposed proposals related to fee switches.
As early as the two temperature check rounds in July 2022, they chose to abstain, merely expressing some concerns in forums. However, by the third proposal in December 2022, when ETH-USDT and DAI-ETH pools were ready to activate a 1/10 fee rate, a16z explicitly voted against it, using 15 million UNI voting rights. This vote ended with a 45% approval rate; although the majority favored it, it failed due to a lack of quorum. In the forums, a16z explicitly stated: "We ultimately cannot support any proposals that do not consider legal and tax factors." This was the first time they publicly opposed.
The core issue is legal risk. A16z believes that once the fee switch is activated, UNI tokens may be classified as securities. According to the famous US Howey test standard, if investors have a reasonable expectation of "earning profits from the efforts of others", the asset may be considered a security. The fee switch creates this expectation - the protocol generates revenue, and token holders share in the profits, which is very similar to the profit distribution model of traditional securities.
However, the essence of the “fee switch” is a redistribution between LPs and protocol revenue. The total fees paid by traders will not change; rather, a portion of the revenue that previously went entirely to LPs will now go to the protocol. This creates a dilemma: LPs or protocol revenue? Uniswap appears to have chosen the latter.
The more immediate threat is market competition, especially the head-to-head clash with Aerodrome on the Base chain. Following Uniswap's proposal, Alexander, the CEO of Dromos Labs, the Aerodrome development team, quipped on X: "I never thought that on the day before Dromos Labs' most important day, our biggest competitor would send us such a big mistake."
In conclusion, while the fee switch can certainly provide valuable support for UNI, whether it can truly “save” Uniswap and return this once-dominant DeFi protocol to its former glory, will take time and testing from the market.
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