MarginFi Leader Resigns on Fiery Day for Major Solana Lender
  • MarginFi’s longtime leader, Edgar Pavlovsky, resigned Wednesday following an internal dispute at the protocol's builder, mrgn.

  • The abrupt exit won’t impact MarginFi's borrow-and-lend functions, but it did spur $100 million in capital flight.

Edgar Pavlovsky, the CEO of the company building crypto borrow-and-lend platform MarginFi resigned Wednesday as internal fissures at the major Solana DeFi project erupted into public view.

“I don't agree with the way things have been done internally or externally,” Pavlovsky said in a resignation notice on X, formerly Twitter. MarginFi's own account called the departure of its co-founder “a function of internal operational disagreements and of his own personal reasons."

The abrupt exit capped a fiery day for Solana's second-largest lending platform that saw allegations fly and tempers flare. Amidst the chaos, users pulled nearly $100 million from the platform, according to analytics site DeFiLlama – MarginFi's largest-ever day of withdrawals.

"All products remain fully operational and are unaffected (and can not be affected) by this departure. The point of DeFi is that core contributors can walk away, and the protocol marches on," MarginFi said in a tweet.

MarginFi's meltdown comes after weeks of withdrawal function issues at the borrow-and-lend platform and months after it launched a points program that preceded a wave of growth-fueling incentivization loyalty schemes across Solana DeFi.

But while other protocols reward their points-earning users with a token, MarginFi hasn't, much to the anger of some of its users.

Oracle issues

In mid-March, a problem in MarginFi's price data sourcing "oracle" infrastructure had caused some users' withdrawal requests to fail to start when Solana's network congestion was still rising.

"The stale Oracle issues currently impact withdrawals, not deposits, I think, so it's leading to some accusations from users who feel that MarginFi is just taking their deposits and not letting them withdraw," the builder of popular liquid staking service SolBlaze told CoinDesk in a Telegram message.