Several threads are feeding the attention. Aave is rolling out the Ethereum version of its V4 upgrade, a rebuild of how the protocol handles lending, and has seen active governance debate over borrowing limits alongside a growing focus on protocol revenue through a mechanism it calls Smart Value Recapture, which routes value back to the system.
Standard Chartered also published a long-term price outlook in June, forecasting a $3,500 level by 2030 if it capitalizes on the growing tokenized assets trend. The mix has drawn renewed notice to DeFi at a moment when most of the market has been falling.
“For price, this is the kind of signal traders usually want to see as July begins,” Santiment said. “New wallets showing up at this pace suggests interest is growing beneath the surface and supporting the price momentum.”
Whether that holds is the open question, as new wallets show attention, not commitment, and the number matters only if it converts into deposits, borrowing and the revenue that follows.
Meanwhile, AAVE faces headwinds in the near term amid a tepid crypto market. Bitcoin , the largest cryptocurrency, is stuck below $60,000 and most large tokens fell in the first half.
If the participation deepens into real usage, it gives AAVE a firmer base than a price bounce alone. If it fades with the market, the wallet spike will read as a burst of speculative interest rather than the start of a recovery.




