Edgar Pavlovsky, the CEO of MarginFi, a company that builds a platform for borrowing and lending cryptocurrency, stepped down from his position on Wednesday. His resignation came after disagreements within the company became public.
Pavlovsky stated, “I don’t agree with the way things have been done internally or externally.” The company’s official statement referred to his departure as a result of internal disagreements and personal reasons.
The day of Pavlovsky’s resignation was chaotic for MarginFi, with accusations flying and tensions running high. Users withdrew nearly $100 million from the platform, marking the largest single-day withdrawal in MarginFi’s history.
Despite the turmoil, MarginFi assured users that their services were still fully operational and unaffected by Pavlovsky’s departure. They emphasized that in the world of decentralized finance (DeFi), the protocol can continue without key individuals.
MarginFi’s troubles have been ongoing, including issues with their withdrawal function and dissatisfaction from users regarding a points program that lacked token rewards, unlike other platforms on Solana DeFi.
MarginFi said in a tweet, “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’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.
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