The Night ReFi Didn't Break
How three protocols chose coordination over collapse, and why that matters for the future of regenerative finance.
↓ scrollOn March 6th, someone dropped a 351,000 kVCM bomb on a thin market.
It started like most DeFi crises do: quietly, in the middle of the night, on chain. On March 6th, a wallet holding 351,209 kVCM tokens routed the entire position through LI.FI into the market, collecting just $18,084 USDC for a bag that had been worth multiples of that. Whether it was panic, strategy, or something in between, the impact was instant and brutal.
kVCM, the carbon index token at the heart of Klima Protocol, dropped 67% in a single night. From $0.078 to ~$0.024. At those prices, every single kVCM backed AZUSD vault on Azos Finance was underwater. Not a little. Catastrophically. A vault opened at the 150% minimum safety ratio was now sitting at ~50% collateralization and falling.
The textbook DeFi playbook here is liquidation bots. Smart contracts doing their job, ruthlessly. Vault holders get wrecked. Bad debt accrues. A stablecoin wobbles. The post-mortem gets written. Another protocol becomes a cautionary tale.
We picked up the phone instead.
Azos Finance isn't a faceless protocol. It was built by people who believe that the ReFi ecosystem is a community, not just a market. So when the charts went vertical in the wrong direction, the response wasn't to let bots sort it out. It was to reach out, directly and immediately, to every vault position that was underwater.
351k kVCM dumped through LI.FI. Price collapses. Every kVCM vault on Azos goes underwater simultaneously.
Azos team identifies the cascade. AZUSD peg holding but pool price showing 33× arb gap. kVCM now $0.024.
Instead of triggering liquidations, Azos reaches out to every underwater vault holder directly. Person to person. Protocol to protocol.
Klima pays back their AZUSD debt in full and rebalances their position. Clean, immediate, no drama.
Regen doubles their kVCM collateral deposit. Not retreating. Doubling down on conviction.
"When every bot would have liquidated and walked away, our partners chose to double down. That's not smart contract logic. That's ecosystem loyalty."
ReFi: you call your ecosystem partners like adults. Everyone survives. Trust compounds.turns out coordination is also a primitive
Zero bad debt. Peg held. Nobody got liquidated.
Let that sink in. A 67% overnight collateral price crash, the kind that has brought down protocols with nine figure TVLs, produced zero bad debt, zero broken peg, zero liquidations on Azos Finance. Not because the smart contracts saved us. Because the humans did.
Klima Protocol's response was immediate and clean. They paid back their AZUSD and rebalanced. No negotiation, no excuses, just accountability. Regen went further: they doubled their collateral. In the middle of a price crash. That's not a financial decision, that's a statement of conviction in the ecosystem they're building with us.
ReFi can't run on the same rails as DeFi and expect different outcomes.
The traditional DeFi model optimizes for trustlessness. Smart contracts over phone calls. Automation over coordination. That's powerful, but it also means the system has no memory, no relationships, no ability to distinguish between a malicious actor and an ecosystem partner caught in a market event they didn't cause.
Regenerative finance is supposed to be different. Not just in what it funds, but in how it behaves under stress. March 6th was a stress test. And the ReFi ecosystem passed it, not because of better code, but because of better relationships.
Protocols compete for TVL, for users, for mindshare. But when one of us gets hit, the whole ecosystem feels it. Klima and Regen didn't just protect their own positions on March 6th. They protected the credibility of the AZUSD peg, and by extension, every protocol that will ever integrate with it. That's what ecosystem thinking looks like in practice.
This won't happen the same way twice.
We're treating this as the gift it is: a live fire drill with no casualties. And to be clear, the protocol's risk architecture functioned exactly as intended. Azos uses a proposal ratchet system where every collateral asset starts with a conservative debt ceiling that can only increase through governance, tied to demonstrated liquidity thresholds and concentration limits. Those guardrails were in place. They worked.
There is another layer that traditional DeFi doesn't have. Azos holds right of first choice agreements with its collateral partners. Before any liquidation event is triggered, partners have the opportunity to remedy their position directly. This isn't a courtesy. It is a formal part of how the protocol manages collateral risk with ecosystem participants whose assets are less liquid than ETH or stablecoins. March 6th validated that design. Both Klima and Regen exercised exactly that right, and the protocol never needed to touch the liquidation mechanism at all.
And to be clear about what this wasn't: our TWAP oracle, medianizer, and delayed price network all functioned exactly as designed. This wasn't an oracle exploit. Someone simply lit their bag on fire, a 351k kVCM position routed through thin liquidity with no apparent concern for price impact. The protocol's price infrastructure held. The collateral value didn't.
The more important lesson isn't technical. It's that the ReFi ecosystem has something traditional DeFi doesn't: people who answer when you call. That's worth more than any circuit breaker.
kVCM didn't stay down. Neither did the ecosystem.
The chart tells the rest of the story. After bottoming near $0.024 on March 6th, kVCM began recovering almost immediately. By mid March it had climbed back to $0.06, and by late March it was trading near $0.075, approaching its pre-incident range. That kind of recovery doesn't happen in a vacuum.
Azos played a direct role in that recovery. By choosing coordination over liquidation, the protocol prevented a forced sell cascade that would have pushed kVCM further into a death spiral. When Klima settled their debt and Regen doubled their collateral, those actions sent a clear signal to the market: the ecosystem had conviction in kVCM's value, and the largest protocol holders were not exiting. That signal mattered. Confidence returned. Price followed.
A traditional liquidation mechanism would have done the opposite. Bots would have seized and sold kVCM collateral into the same thin liquidity that caused the crash, amplifying the dump and likely pushing the token well below its $0.024 floor. Instead, by exercising the right of first choice framework with partners, Azos removed that sell pressure entirely. The protocol's design didn't just protect AZUSD. It protected the underlying asset.