Dr. Jan Wüstenfeld
Dr. Jan Wüstenfeld|Apr 24, 2025 15:28
Bitcoin-collateralized loans - Banks that believe in the long-term value proposition of Bitcoin will have an edge and here is why🏆: Consider you want to take out a loan to purchase a home for $500k. Assume a bank is willing to lend you the money at 7% APR (note: for simplicity reasons we assume the borrower does not need to post down payment as it is not relevant for the following example). 🏠 A Bitcoin-focused bank offers a better deal: a $550k loan where $500k purchases the home and $50k becomes Bitcoin collateral held by the bank. 💰 Why would they do this? The bank benefits from potential Bitcoin appreciation and retains the Bitcoin or part of the Bitcoin even after loan completion. 🚀 Why is this beneficial for borrowers? The bank can pass on some of the benefits. Borrowers receive significantly better loan terms. Additionally, they may get a share in Bitcoin gains upon repayment. A win-win arrangement. ✅ For a $500k home purchase, compare: 1. Traditional approach: $500k at 7% APR fixed-rate (3,327 monthly, 1.2M total) 2. Bitcoin-collateralized approach: $550k at 5% APR fixed-rate (2,954 monthly, 1.06M total) Even for a 6% Bitcoin-collaterized loan, borrowers save $10k over 30 years. All that is before a potential Bitcoin share upon loan repayment. Borrower Benefits: 1. Lower Payments: Monthly payments drop to 2,954, saving 373 monthly—$134k over 30 years. 💸 2. Upside Potential: If Bitcoin grows by 5% CAGR, a 50/50 gain-sharing deal could cut the loan balance by $108k. In a bullish scenario of a CAGR of 15%, this returns the borrower 1.66 million, fully offsetting the loan costs and generating an additional return. 📈💥 Limited Risks: 1. Fixed-rate savings: Even if Bitcoin falls to zero, total repayments at a fixed 5% APR are unchanged despite the $550k loan being $50k larger than the $500k standard loan. 📊 2. Variable rate risk: Only in extreme cases (e.g., Bitcoin as collateral going to zero) might variable rate adjustments raise costs due to a larger loan ($550k vs $500k), potentially deterring Bitcoin skeptics to agree to such a loan. ⚠️ 3. Bank's mitigation: A bank with a long-term vision of Bitcoin can mitigate this by absorbing the zero-value risk. This keeps terms attractive, even for skeptics who think it is a Ponzi scheme and on the upside, if Bitcoin stays flat or grows, rising collateral could enhance terms even further if the loan has variale rates. 🛡️ Bank Benefits: 1. Enhanced Security: The $550k loan is backed by Bitcoin collateral (projected to grow), plus the $500k home. 🏡💎 2. Capture upside potential of Bitcoin on top of loan repayments. 📈 Banks that incorporate Bitcoin as collateral can gain a competitive edge in the mortgage market by offering better rates while positioning themselves to benefit from Bitcoin's long-term potential. This approach creates a win-win scenario where even borrowers skeptical about Bitcoin can access more favorable loan terms with minimal additional risk.
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