Sid Powell, CEO and co-founder of Maple, is bringing an inspired Wall Street lending model to the crypto sphere, using Bitcoin as the basis.
His company is pioneering a new way to conduct institutional lending where it combines the best of traditional finance with the velocity and liquidity of a blockchain network.
In a recent interview with TheStreet Roundtable, Powell described Maple’s innovative approach as “asset-backed lending on-chain.” The concept has already piqued the interest of high-net-worth individuals and fixed-income investors seeking reliable returns in the digital asset space.
Maple lends to institutions such as trading firms and hedge funds, using cryptocurrency, such as Bitcoin, as collateral. Borrowers receive stablecoins directly into their wallets, while the firm holds the collateral in liquid digital assets.
Afterwards, investors earn a yield on those loans, just as they would in traditional credit markets. In addition, Powell claimed that Maple provided more enticing over-collateralized loans with 30-day redemption periods. Contrast that with private credit markets, where loans are frequently unsecured and locked for years.
He continued that anybody who had worked with pledged securities or margin lending would understand that the main benefit of cryptocurrencies is liquidity.
Moreover, Powell stated that it takes six months to sell a house but only a few hours to sell a billion dollars worth of Bitcoin. Therefore, it is concluded that if the loan does not work out, he could sell his digital assets in many places.
The 2022 collapse of several crypto lenders, such as BlockFi, has heightened concerns about risk management in the sector. Powell acknowledges these challenges and insists that Maple has built-in safeguards to mitigate them.
To solve this, Maple provides yields on par with high-yield credit but with transparent margin policies and a safety net of liquid collateral through institutional-grade custodians such as BitGo.
“We spend a lot of time explaining how we manage margins,” Powell observed. “If Bitcoin drops in price, how long do we wait before selling the asset? How long do we give someone to post more collateral or pay the loan?”
It is noteworthy that Powell was dedicated to achieving goals beyond this one.
For him, accomplishing this objective was the first move to face more established financial giants like Apollo or Ares. Thus, it might be possible to work with companies like J.P. Morgan to offer standardized Bitcoin-backed securities to pension funds and combine the speed of cryptocurrencies with the stability of traditional finance.
According to reports published on January 27, decentralized lending platform Maple Finance introduced an on-chain structured yield product designed to give financial institutions exposure to Bitcoin.
Dubbed Lend + Long, the product was aimed at yield funds, corporate treasuries, and institutional investors, allowing them to gain exposure to Bitcoin price appreciation without direct exposure to the downside.
According to Sid Powell, institutional investors have been seeking a way to gain all the upside of Bitcoin exposure but don’t want the stress of the volatility that comes with it.
Lend + Long offered structured exposure to Bitcoin without having to own the underlying asset. The product worked by buying Bitcoin call options and accruing yield from a high-yield liquidity pool run by Maple itself.
Maple Finance manages several lending pools tailored to different risk appetites. For example, its Maple High Yield Secured Pool accepts a wide range of low market cap risky altcoins as collateral while paying lenders higher interest rates. On the other hand, its Blue-Chip Secured Pool accepts only Bitcoin and Ether as collateral, making for a much more risk-averse lending ecosystem.
To minimize risk, all loans in Maple’s high-yield, on-chain pool are over-collateralized, requiring borrowers to collateralize more than they borrow.
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