Lendasat is not affected by the recent NPM security exploit. We do not use, either directly or as a sub-dependency, any of the libraries that were targeted. Stay safe. image
๐Ÿ“… September 3rd, rates start at 11% APR ๐Ÿš€ ๐Ÿ”น11% for our @paywithmoon prepaid card ๐Ÿ”น11% in USDC on Polygon ๐Ÿ”น12% in USDC on Ethereum ๐Ÿ”น12% in Euros ๐Ÿ’กA Bitcoin hodler locks the image ir BTC on-chain and agrees to pay you the yield. It's that simple ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™‚๏ธ
Bitcoin is down over 10% from its August peak of $124K. Now itโ€™s stuck below $112Kโ€ฆ and heading into September, historically its worst month ๐Ÿ“‰ But this September could break the curse. Hereโ€™s why: image September has been brutal for Bitcoin: - 9 of the past 14 years closed red - Average loss: ~12% This is why traders brace for impact every year. But 2025 could be different. Bitcoin continues to attract investors, since january: - BTC ETFs have seen ~$9B net inflows - Companies added over 430k BTC to their treasuries Thatโ€™s not just inflows. Thatโ€™s a structural shift. image Macro backdrop: The Fed is expected to cut rates soon. That may already be priced in, but it signals the start of a dovish cycle. Easier money = risk-on. And historically, Bitcoin loves expanding liquidity. The risks? - Trading activity is lighter than usual, that can make price swings sharper. - Macro and geopolitical situation is still fragile. But whales are accumulating. Institutions are buying dips. The downside looks more cushioned than in past Septembers. Bitcoin testes $106K support, but 2025 feels different. For long-term hodlers, the real question is: why sell BTC if the trend is still up? If you need cash, a smarter play might be to collateralize your Bitcoin and borrow what you need, without giving up self-custody ๐Ÿ”’
BTC > 113k So it's not bear market yet? image
BITCOIN VS ALTS: Building decentralized finance (DeFi) on Bitcoin is safer and cooler than building on Ethereum. Here 5 reasons is why ๐Ÿงต 1๏ธโƒฃ BTC collateral sits on one of the deepest and most liquid markets. Global spot and futures trade around the clock. High volume and tight spreads mean you can size in and out with less slippage. More depth during stress helps reduce cascade liquidations. image 2๏ธโƒฃ Bitcoin keeps the base layer simple and conservative. Bitcoin ossification is a feature, not a bug. Frequent hard forks inevitably leave part of the community behind, or create a culture of accepting changes without caution. As the OP_RETURN limit debate showed, every modification in Bitcoin is carefully studied. Performance will never be prioritized over decentralization and security. Your collateral relies on predictable rules, not on fast features or experimental code paths. Here is a list of Ethereum's hardforks: https://ethereum.org/en/history/ 3๏ธโƒฃ Locking collateral on Bitcoin trims the attack surface. You can use time locks and multisig instead of stacks of interdependent contracts. Fewer external oracles and governance switches. Less to break, less to exploit. image 4๏ธโƒฃ Bitcoin is more decentralized and harder to censor. - Bitcoin has over 100k independent full nodes enforcing the rules. - Although concentration in the US is concerning, hashrate is now spread across diverse operators, improving compared to the 60% once based in China before 2021. - No single team can flip a switch to change how your collateral works. It is just UTXOs. 5๏ธโƒฃ Borrowing against BTC lets you keep upside while unlocking liquidity. In many places you may defer taxes because you are not selling. Repay with future income. If your thesis plays out, you reclaim your BTC and the gains. Always know your LTV and liquidation rules before you borrow. ๐Ÿ‘‰ END: We criticize Ethereum, but we are pragmatic. It enabled stablecoin growth and made Lendasat possible. $USDT and $USDC are useful for self-custodial lending, but Bitcoin network offers stronger assurances and decentralization than other chains. As stablecoins move to Bitcoin through Taproot Assets, RGB, or Ark, BTC-backed loans can become safer, simpler, and easier to use. We are not bullish enough!
Bitcoin's Open Interest Keeps Climbing ๐Ÿ“ˆ The continuous rise in Open Interest (OI) reflects a growing number of derivative contracts, signaling increased market activity. As OI climbs, it suggests that more traders and investors are entering the Bitcoin market, whether betting long or short, bringing in fresh capital and boosting liquidity. This trend is positive for the financialization of Bitcoin. It attracts more sophisticated market participants, helps develop the broader market infrastructure, and, given Bitcoinโ€™s relative youth, contributes to price discovery. A higher OI also points to a more mature and resilient market, one better positioned to support mainstream adoption and integration with traditional finance. Letโ€™s not forget: Bitcoin is a currency. Like any currency, it must be embraced by the financial world to achieve adoption and move toward full Bitcoinization on a global scale ๐ŸŒ image