Getting loans with cryptocurrency can often be less complicated than getting traditional bank loans — what exactly are crypto loans?
The advent of crypto lending was a crucial breakthrough in DeFi. Lenders could suddenly generate passive yields from formerly illiquid assets. Borrowers could immediately receive cash for their crypto without triggering any tax events.
As a result of crypto lending, almost every cryptocurrency now has far more utility, and therefore value, than it did before.
What Is Crypto Lending?
Crypto lending involves one party lending cryptocurrency to another party in exchange for interest payments. At its core, crypto lending works similarly to traditional lending: someone needs more cash than they have on hand, and someone else (usually a bank) lends them this money and charges interest. There are, however, a number of important differences.
Another notable difference between traditional and crypto lending relates to collateral requirements.
When you take out a crypto loan, you need to put up a lot more collateral than you normally would. In fact, many platforms ask that you overcollateralize, which means put up more value than you want to borrow. This is because crypto loans are permissionless, which means you usually don’t need to pass know-your-customer (KYC) verifications to take out a loan. As such, lenders don’t know who you are and therefore need a guarantee that you won’t skip town without repaying.
This brings us to some important questions: why would someone put up as much or even more money than they want to borrow? And if you can’t take out a loan for more money than you already have, is there any point in crypto lending?
What’s the Point of Crypto Lending?
There’s one obvious benefit to lending your crypto: you earn interest on what would otherwise be a stagnant asset. The interest rates you can earn by lending vary quite a bit, as mentioned earlier, and commonly fall between 1-20% for most cryptos. These rates favorably compare to the average savings account interest rates, which in the US sit at just 0.1% APY.
The reasons for borrowing crypto, on the other hand, are a little more complicated.
Of the various reasons you might want to borrow crypto, releasing liquidity is among the most likely. Those with a large chunk of their wealth in crypto can find themselves in a curiously annoying position when the crypto markets boom. Their assets rising in value is obviously ideal, but as soon as they sell anything, they’re liable to pay tax.
If, however, they use that crypto as collateral on a crypto loan, they can have cash in their pocket without giving up any future price rises — and without paying tax. If the markets dip, however, their collateral is liquidated and they keep their loaned cash. And if the markets rise, they can buy back their collateral for lower than its current market price, sell it and then keep the difference as profit.
Some lending services enable you to trade on margin and gain leverage without going through a centralized exchange.
Here’s how that works: first, you take out a loan by putting up Bitcoin as collateral; then, you use the loaned cash to buy more collateral which you add to your existing loan. You keep doing this over and over again until you can no longer loan any more money. This allows you to grow your position and capture the additional profit that you would have otherwise forfeited. Despite the extra profit, however, margin trading is considered an ultra-high-risk strategy. If your collateral’s price moves the wrong way, your collateral will be liquidated to protect the people who lent you cash. And because you used that cash to put up more collateral, you’ll have nothing left. As such, margin trading is not for the faint hearted.
By far the most common use for flash loans is to take advantage of arbitrage opportunities: finding where different exchanges offer varying interest rates. If you take out a flash loan but can’t repay it before the block is validated, the transaction will be canceled, rendering it non-existent and as if it never happened. Given that executing flash loans requires a fair bit of technical knowledge, and arbitrage opportunities arise somewhat infrequently, it’s unlikely that most people will use flash loans.
As we’ve shown, there are a number of unique and useful use cases for crypto lending, despite the overcollateralization requirements for the borrowing side of the equation.
But regardless of whether you want to lend or borrow, it’s important to understand how CeFi and DeFi lending platforms differ: even though both aim to achieve the same goal, they offer these services in quite different ways.
How Does CeFi Crypto Lending Work?
CeFi platforms ask you to jump through some hoops that DeFi exchanges don’t. First and foremost, you’ll need an account with an exchange that offers crypto lending services, like Coinbase, Binance and BlockFi. You’ll also need to pass KYC verification, which involves submitting identity documents and bank details.
Once you have an active exchange account, you can find the platform’s crypto lending rates by navigating to the lending area, which can go by different names depending on which platform you use. The image below is taken from Binance’s Crypto Loans area.
If you’re interested in borrowing, you can usually find out how much collateral you would need to put up and the payable interest rates by playing around with the input fields. The repayment rates will fluctuate based on your loan term, which crypto you borrow,and how much collateral you put up. If the loan term meets your requirements, you can then submit a request to the platform which will then verify your collateral. As soon as the exchange approves the loan, your borrowed cash will arrive in your account.
Lending through CeFi platforms, as opposed to borrowing, works a little differently. Rather than lend all your money to just one individual, CeFi exchanges use liquidity pools to lend your money out to multiple users simultaneously. You won’t know to whom you’re loaning money, but rest assured that your funds are quite safe. The platform gives you a bond which underwrites your loans. Once the loan expires, you can return the bonds to recover your funds and any accrued interest.
How Does Decentralized Crypto Lending Work?
Most DeFi lending protocols require borrowers to overcollateralize by at least 110%, and their interest rates are almost universally governed by supply and demand.
There are a few exceptions, one of which is MakerDAO, whose members determine its borrowing rates through votes.
DeFi lending is entirely permissionless (unlike CeFi lending) which means there’s no KYC verification to lend or borrow crypto. This makes DeFi protocols comparatively more open than their CeFi counterparts, as anyone with an internet connection can partake. They’re also trustless, in that you don’t need to trust people to run the service as expected; you (or a knowledgeable expert) can manually audit its code before you commit any funds. However, remember that if a coding bug or group of hackers breaks the platform’s code, its developers aren’t financially liable for your lost funds.
Advantages and Disadvantages of Crypto Lending
As we’ve shown, both CeFi and DeFi lending have their upsides and downsides, and neither is objectively “better” than the other. Which you should use, therefore, is situational and dependent on your personal risk appetite as well as your technical knowledge. But regardless of which you use, there are some general advantages and disadvantages to crypto lending that you should know.
Advantages of Crypto Loans
1. They have low interest rates compared to most credit cards and some personal loans, although mortgage and car loan interest rates are generally lower.
2. You can earn passive revenue quickly and easily from assets that you otherwise couldn’t.
3. You can choose the currency in which you receive your loan from a wide range of options, and not just the local currency.
4. You don’t need to pass any credit checks before you get a loan, and decentralized platforms don’t require an account or any KYC checks at all.
5. Loaned cash usually arrives within a few hours, and most DeFi loans land within a matter of minutes. This benefits both borrowers and lenders: the former can access cash faster, and the latter can accrue interest on their idle assets earlier than they otherwise could.
6. There’s no decision-making bias. Whether you obtain a loan depends solely on financial factors. Nobody is denied a loan because of their race, gender, religion or any other protected characteristic.
6. All crypto loans are permanently recorded on a blockchain, which eases some regulatory compliance burdens and increases transparency in the broader financial sector.
7. Although CeFi crypto loans require an account and KYC verification, DeFi crypto loans are permissionless; they don’t require any identity or banking verification on your part.
Disadvantages of Crypto Loans
1. Some lending platforms don’t let you access your funds as fast as you might like. This illiquidity can negatively affect your financial security, especially if too much of your capital is tied up in loans, meaning that you cannot quickly withdraw it.
2. Crypto lending is, for the most part, unregulated. As such, when a platform is outed as an elaborate Ponzi scheme, your money isn’t protected by any financial regulators.
3. When your collateral drops in value, your lender will issue a margin call. You must then deposit more collateral by a certain time. If you don’t, the lender will liquidate your collateral. If this happens you will incur a loss, but you do keep your borrowed cash.
4. The high collateral requirements for crypto lending greatly increases your chances of defaulting on your loan.
5. CeFi and DeFi lending services operate exclusively online, which renders them prime targets for hacking groups. As such, your money is comparatively less secure than it would be in a typical bank.
Is Crypto Lending Safe?
For the most part, yes, crypto lending is safe because your money is lent out through smart contracts. These contracts are publicly auditable and verifiably secure; or at least as safe as the platform providing them. And whenever you lend out crypto, your funds are protected by the high collateral requirements.
Which Platforms Offer Crypto Loans?
Below are some current CeFi and DeFi platforms through which you can borrow and lend your crypto.
CeFi Lending Platforms
DeFi Lending Platforms
Disclaimer: this article was updated in general on August 2, 2022.