Across the panel, speakers repeatedly suggested that institutional finance and crypto-native finance remain fundamentally misaligned in their approaches to risk. While DeFi evolved around permissionless access, composability, and capital efficiency, institutions continue to prioritize predictability, legal accountability, and operational simplicity.

That tension was especially visible in the discussion around rehypothecation, the practice of reusing customer collateral to generate additional yield, which became one of the defining risks exposed during the 2022 lending collapse.

“The most important thing to ask… is where is your Bitcoin stored,” said Adam Reeds, co-founder and CEO of Ledn.

Jay Patel, co-founder and CEO of Lygos Finance, said borrowers increasingly need to “underwrite the lender” themselves before taking loans against their bitcoin holdings.

“The biggest point in my mind is definitely the rehypothecation piece,” Patel said.

Blume said institutional borrowers often reject crypto-native lending structures not because they oppose bitcoin, but because the operational complexity surrounding many DeFi systems remains difficult to justify to boards, shareholders, and risk committees.

At one point, Blume distilled the divide between crypto-native finance and institutional finance into a single observation.

“Our whole financial system is set up to have someone else to blame,” he said, arguing that institutional borrowers still prefer identifiable intermediaries, standardized processes, and legal accountability over fully autonomous financial systems.

For many lenders on stage, the future of crypto credit no longer appears tied to making finance more decentralized. Instead, it may depend on convincing institutional borrowers that bitcoin-backed lending can behave predictably enough to resemble the traditional system they already trust.

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.

More For You

Northern lights. (v2osk/Unsplash)

Bitcoin is showing a rare alignment across on-chain data, futures positioning, and options flows that points to further upside.

What to know:

  • Bitcoin has moved above key cost basis levels, strengthening the bullish case, blockchain analysts said.
  • Funding rates have flipped from negative to neutral, easing sustained short pressure in futures markets, Bitfinex said.
  • Dealers are short gamma around $82K, which can force hedging that adds buying pressure as price rises, analysts…

About the Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Stories