Key Points Standard Chartered sets $3,500 AAVE target by 2030, citing institutional DeFi growth. KelpDAO exploit tested resilience, but Aave’s core protocol remained intact. Aave was trading
Key Points
- Standard Chartered sets $3,500 AAVE target by 2030, citing institutional DeFi growth.
- KelpDAO exploit tested resilience, but Aave’s core protocol remained intact.
Aave was trading near $70 on June 25, 2026, when Standard Chartered’s head of digital assets research, Geoff Kendrick, initiated coverage with a $3,500 year-end 2030 price target.
Within a week, the token rose about 25% to around $92, gaining over 4% in a single day while several other large-cap cryptocurrencies traded lower.
Kendrick projected a potential 50x return and indicated that AAVE could outperform both Bitcoin and Ethereum over the same period.
The call was framed as a structural thesis on decentralized finance rather than a short-term momentum trade.
DeFi Lending and Institutional Capital
Kendrick outlined a price path of $180 by end-2026, $600 in 2027, $1,200 in 2028, $2,200 in 2029, and $3,500 by the end of 2030.
His projections assume tokenized assets deployed in DeFi could expand 37-fold to $2.7 trillion, while stablecoin supply grows toward $2 trillion over the same horizon.
He also expects real-world asset tokenization to rise from about 3.5% to 30% of total DeFi activity.
At the time of the report, Aave accounted for approximately 61.5% of active DeFi loans and 52.4% of total value locked across decentralized lending protocols.
Separately, Boston Consulting Group has estimated that tokenized illiquid assets could reach $16 trillion by 2030, placing DeFi growth forecasts into a broader context.
Institutional activity has begun moving in this direction, including JPMorgan’s filing for a second tokenized fund on Ethereum.
KelpDAO Exploit and Risk Factors
The coverage followed the April 2026 KelpDAO exploit, in which attackers minted roughly $290 million in tokens through a compromised rsETH bridge and used them as collateral on Aave.
Aave’s potential exposure was estimated at $230 million, while protocol deposits fell sharply from $44 billion to $23 billion during the aftermath.
The vulnerability was traced to KelpDAO’s bridge infrastructure rather than Aave’s core smart contracts.
Aave operates a Safety Module that allows staked AAVE to be slashed in deficit scenarios, forming part of its risk mitigation design alongside external security audits.
The $3,500 target depends on continued growth in tokenized real-world assets, stablecoin expansion, and Aave maintaining market share amid competition and protocol upgrades.
Downside risks include stricter regulation of DeFi lending in major jurisdictions, further smart-contract failures affecting confidence, or slower-than-expected adoption of tokenized assets.
Kendrick also forecasts Bitcoin reaching $100,000 by end-2026 and $500,000 by 2030, with Ethereum potentially rising to $4,000 in 2026 and $40,000 by 2030, while projecting AAVE to outperform both on a percentage basis.
He described the current phase as one in which decentralized finance protocols could capture a larger share of the digital asset value chain as institutional participation increases.