Decentralized Finance (DeFi): The Future of Finance
Duke University via Coursera Specialization
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22
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Overview
DeFi and the Future of Finance is a four course learning experience. DeFi or Decentralized Finance is a new technology whereby users interact as peers with algorithms or smart contracts rather than through traditional intermediaries such as banks, brokerages or insurance companies. The technology has the potential to transform finance as we know it. It solves key problems in traditional finance such as lack of inclusion, inefficiency, opacity, centralized control and lack of interoperability.
The first course, DeFi Infrastructure, focuses on the historical evolution of decentralized finance as well as the problems that DeFi solves. The second course, DeFi Primitives, deals with mechanics, supply and ownership, and loans and swaps. The third course, DeFi Deep Dive, explores the leading protocols including MakerDAO, Compound, Aave, Uniswap and dYdX. The fourth course, DeFi Risks and Opportunities, analyzes the key risks including smart contract risk, governance risk, scaling as well as regulatory issues. The final part of the course sketches a vision of finance in the future including the winners and the losers.
Syllabus
Course 1: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Infrastructure
- Offered by Duke University. Decentralized Finance: The Future of Finance is a set of four courses taught by Campbell R. Harvey (Professor of ... Enroll for free.
Course 2: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Primitives
- Offered by Duke University. DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The second course ... Enroll for free.
Course 3: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Deep Dive
- Offered by Duke University. DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The third course is ... Enroll for free.
Course 4: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Opportunities and Risks
- Offered by Duke University. DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The final course is ... Enroll for free.
- Offered by Duke University. Decentralized Finance: The Future of Finance is a set of four courses taught by Campbell R. Harvey (Professor of ... Enroll for free.
Course 2: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Primitives
- Offered by Duke University. DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The second course ... Enroll for free.
Course 3: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Deep Dive
- Offered by Duke University. DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The third course is ... Enroll for free.
Course 4: Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Opportunities and Risks
- Offered by Duke University. DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The final course is ... Enroll for free.
Courses
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Decentralized Finance: The Future of Finance is a set of four courses taught by Campbell R. Harvey (Professor of Finance at the Fuqua School of Business, Duke University, and a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research) that focus on decentralized finance (DeFi). In this first course, we begin by exploring the origins of DeFi and take a broad historical view from the earliest barter economies, such as the first peer-to-peer exchanges of bartering, to present day. The course also looks at historical examples of money having value even though it is not officially backed. We then focus on the key infrastructure components: blockchain, cryptocurrency, smart contracts, oracles, stablecoins and decentralized applications (or dApps). This includes discussion of the mechanics of the Ethereum and Bitcoin blockchains including cryptographic hashing. Next, we focus on the specific problems that DeFi is designed to solve: inefficiency (costly, slow, and insecure today), limited access (1.7 billion are unbanked), opacity (we need to trust regulators to monitor banks and the regulators have mixed records), centralized control (financial system is oligopolistic imposing higher fees than we would have in a competitive market) and lack of interoperability (it is difficult to move funds from one financial institution to another today). The course closes by exploring many of the myths about the crypto space.
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DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The second course is called DeFi Primitives. It is recommended that you take the first course, DeFi Infrastructure, before this course. In this course, we talk about transaction mechanics and introduce both fungible and non-fungible tokens – or NFTs. The course explores the important issue of custody (holding private keys). The course then explores supply adjustment which includes the minting and burning of tokens. The mechanics of bonding curves are introduced. The course then explores the role of direct as well as indirect incentives in the DeFi system. We then analyze swaps or decentralized exchange. We begin by contrasting DEX with centralized exchange (e.g., Coinbase or Binance). The course details the mechanics of Automated Market Makers and provides a number of detailed examples. There is a discussion of impermanent loss as well as (legal) front-running. We end the course by exploring both collateralized and flash loans.
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DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The third course is called DeFi Deep Dive. It is essential that you do the first two courses I. DeFi Infrastructure and II. DeFi Primitives before doing this course. It is the longest of the four courses and focuses on some of the leading protocols in the DeFi space. We will look at Credit and Lending (and feature MakerDAO, Compound and Aave), Decentralized Exchange with an analysis of how protocols like Uniswap and Balancer works, Derivatives (featuring Yield Protocol, dYdX and Synthetix) and Tokenization with an analysis of Set Protocol as well as wrapped bitcoin. For many of these leading protocols, we include detailed examples of how the mechanics work. For example, we show how to use a dYdX flash swap to execute an arbitrage transaction (take advantage of different prices on different exchanges for the same asset).
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DeFi and the Future of Finance is a set of four courses that focus on decentralized finance. The final course is called DeFi Opportunities and Risks. It is essential that you complete the first three courses: I. DeFi Infrastructure; II. DeFi Primitives; and III. DeFi Deep Dive before beginning the fourth course. The course starts with the premise that an analysis of any new technology must clearly gauge the risks and challenges. Given that DeFi is only a few years old there are plenty of risks. The course begins with the most obvious risk: smart contract risk. Smart contracts are foundational for DeFi. The code of these contracts is public - opening a clear attack vector for hackers. That is, in traditional finance, hackers need to break into a system to get access to the code and data. In DeFi, everything is open source.There are many other risks studied including: Governance risk; Oracle risk; Scaling risk; Decentralized Exchange or DEX risk; Custodial risk; Environmental risk; and Regulatory risk.
Taught by
Cam Harvey
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Reviews
5.0 rating, based on 1 Class Central review
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Professor Harvey makes the complicated understandable. I highly recommend taking his decentralized finance courses at duke and reading his writings to do a deep dive into all things decentralized finance.