Imagine you’ve just deposited your funds into a vault. After confirming the transaction, you receive something called vault shares. As you check the interface, you also notice terms like eRate and NAV.
At first glance, it can feel confusing.
What do these numbers actually represent?
How do they relate to your money?
And more importantly—how do they grow over time?
To understand how vaults really work, it helps to break these concepts down into simple, intuitive ideas.
When you deposit into a vault, you don’t just leave your assets there—you receive shares in return.
Think of the vault like a jar filled with capital. When you deposit funds, you’re adding to that jar, and in exchange, you receive a certain number of slices that represent your ownership.
These slices are your vault shares.
Each share represents a portion of the total vault. If you own 10% of the shares, you effectively own 10% of everything inside the vault.
Now, where does eRate come in?
eRate is simply the value of each share. It tells you how much one share is worth at any given time.
As the vault generates yield, the total value inside the jar increases. But instead of giving you more shares, the system increases the value of each share. That’s what eRate reflects.
So over time:
Your number of shares stays the same
The value of each share (eRate) increases
That’s how your position grows.
To understand the bigger picture, we need to look at NAV, or Net Asset Value.
In simple terms, NAV is the total value of everything inside the vault.
If the vault holds assets worth $1,000,000, then the NAV is $1,000,000.
Now connect that to shares:
NAV = the entire pool
Shares = your slice of that pool
If the NAV increases because the vault earns yield, then each share becomes more valuable. That increase is reflected in the eRate.
So when NAV grows, your ownership doesn’t change—but the value of what you own does.
One of the most important things to understand about vaults is that they are not designed for short-term use.
Vault strategies take time to work.
Capital is deployed into different opportunities, and those strategies need time to generate returns. There are also real-world costs involved—transaction fees, execution costs, and rebalancing actions—that can affect short-term performance.
Think of a vault like a garden.
You plant seeds (your capital), but you don’t expect immediate results. Growth happens gradually. Some days may show little change, while others show progress—but over time, the results become meaningful.
Short-term fluctuations are normal. What matters is the long-term trend.
Time allows:
strategies to perform
costs to be absorbed
compounding to take effect
Without time, you’re only seeing a small part of the system’s potential.
Another common misconception is that vaults simply hold assets.
In reality, vaults are actively managed systems.
Your capital is not sitting idle—it is continuously being deployed across different strategies. These strategies may change depending on market conditions, opportunities, and risk considerations.
You can think of the vault like a chef in a kitchen.
The ingredients (capital) are constantly being used, adjusted, and combined in different ways to produce the best possible outcome. The system is always working behind the scenes to optimize performance.
This includes:
allocating capital to different strategies
rebalancing positions over time
adapting to changing market conditions
The vault is not passive—it is actively optimizing your capital.
When you combine all these elements, the value of vaults becomes clearer.
Over time, yield is generated and reinvested, allowing compounding to take effect. Rebalancing ensures that capital is continuously directed toward better opportunities. Active management helps reduce inefficiencies and improve overall performance.
As a user, you’re not just earning yield—you’re benefiting from how that yield is managed.
The longer you stay in the system:
the more compounding works in your favor
the more optimization takes place
the more stable and meaningful your returns become
This is why participation over time often leads to better outcomes.
To bring everything together, here’s a clear mental model:
Vault = a pooled capital system
Shares = your ownership in that system
eRate = the value of each share
NAV = the total value of the vault
Time = the driver of growth
Management = the layer that optimizes performance
Once you understand these pieces, vaults become much easier to navigate.
What may seem complex at first is actually a structured system designed to grow capital efficiently—one share at a time.
