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droffel | 4 years ago
If it was as safe as you seem to think it is, why didn't they just pony up their own money? 8.6% is far above any standard investment vehicle at the moment. For a safe investment, it's free money!
droffel | 4 years ago
If it was as safe as you seem to think it is, why didn't they just pony up their own money? 8.6% is far above any standard investment vehicle at the moment. For a safe investment, it's free money!
SailingSperm|4 years ago
These types of loans of course aren't useful for most people in the traditional sense where somebody needs access to money they don't have. These are mostly for 2 cases: 1) Exposure to other crypto when you think both your collatoral and the crpyto you want to be lent will both be worth more. SO you borrow $100 worth of USDC, give $200 BTC as collatoral, use the $100 USDC to buy $100 worth of ETH. SO if after a month ETH and BTC have gone up, you can sell enough to pay the $100 USDC loan and keep the profit.
2) Access to illiquid capital. If you have $1 million of BTC but don't want to sell it and trigger a capital gains event, you use that as temporary collateral to get access to something else, thus never selling your current crpyto holdings (unless they fall below the liquidate threshold of the loan)
I should say too, using these methods still has counter party risk regardless.
menzoic|4 years ago
lottin|4 years ago
Then there's also foreign exchange risk. The return on these loans is quoted in terms of the currency the debt is denominated in, whereas what the investor cares about is the return of the investment in terms of their local currency. This is the same situation that an investor would face if they decided to buy Argentine bonds, which pay over 20% annually in pesos. The return that they would get in their local currency would likely be much smaller. It could even be negative.
fastball|4 years ago
ttty2|4 years ago
[deleted]
dannyw|4 years ago
Why isn't it arbitrated away? Because institutions and market makers don't trust crypto. When they do, I'm sure it'll go as low as rest of market rates.
G3rn0ti|4 years ago
The other reason is they cut the middle man between a creditor and debtor i.e. banks.
If banks started to sell financial products based on liquidity pools, they had a hard time to compete with places like compound or aave. However, they would set themselves free of the federal fund rate and therefore they could actually provide higher rates to their customers.
So basically, rates would be rising everywhere.
menzoic|4 years ago