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Maple Finance partners with Celsius to launch wETH lending pool

The capital pool promises to enable greater access to finance for traditional corporations and institutions seeking to capitalize on emerging opportunities within the DeFi space.

Digital asset lending platform Celsius has become the first pool delegate from the centralized finance market to deploy a crypto-centric lending service on Maple Finance, utilizing the latter’s smart contract and blockchain infrastructure to facilitate a $30 million pool to institutional investors.

Celsius succeeds existing pool delegates BlockTower, Orthogonal Trading, Maven 11 and Alameda Research in partnering with Maple on such an endeavor.

The introduction of wrapped Ether (wETH) is set to complement the existing accessibility to trade Circle’s native stablecoin, USD Coin (USDC), enabling investors to utilize the asset across an array of trading components, including staking, lending and borrowing.

Cointelegraph spoke to Sidney Powell, Maple Finance’s co-founder and CEO, to uncover the prerequisites and financial nuances that interested institutional investors must be aware of before engaging with the pool.

Powell shared that “Institutions work directly with the Celsius team to borrow from this pool. Borrowers have to pass through Celsius’ established KYC and credit assessments,” adding:

“In this instance, digital asset institutions Wintermute and Amber have already been doing business on Maple, so have an on-chain credit reputation, and signed a Master Loan Agreement (MLN) too. This, plus Celsius’ established processes, means onboarding has been streamlined for all parties.”

Maple Finance revealed to Cointelegraph that the initial syndicated loan of $47.25 million issued to Alameda Research in mid-November 2021 has today exceeded $100 million, with the FTX-associated trading firm being the sole borrower in the transaction.

Abracadabra deposited $25 million alongside other projects including the popular play-to-earn horse racing game Zed Run and CoinShares.

“Syndicated loan” is a term that denotes the process by which financial institutions, typically from the banking industry, extend finance to private corporations, either on an individual basis or as part of a consortium. The capital afforded to these corporations is viewed in the form of a loan and, as such, is subject to inflationary payback schemes dependent on the case complexity and evaluated risk.

Over the past few years, a number of prominent banking institutions have participated in blockchain-centric syndicated loans — more recently also traversing over to decentralized finance (DeFi) — including BNP Paribas and ING, which were two of seven major banks to partner with R3 and Finastra in October 2017, and BBVA, which implemented a distributed ledger technology model with British news agency Finextra the following year.

Related: German Company Secures 750 Million Euro ‘Eco-Friendly’ Loan Via Blockchain

Following its inception just nine months ago, Maple has grown exponentially to register $768million in loans originated, and $649 million in total value locked at the time of writing. Moving forward, it expects to achieve $5 billion in TVL by year-end, alongside $1 billion of loans within the Alameda pool across the same time period. 

Powell commented on the necessary due diligence that traditional firms should consider and complete before engaging with the DeFi space:

“Maple was built to disrupt the banking infrastructure that I had to work with within traditional finance. But when it comes to due diligence, the same rules apply!”

He added that asset managers at traditional firms have all the equipment necessary in the DeFi space, “just faster and more efficiently because the information is on-chain information and immutable.”

Bitcoin ‘wild’ odds see 85% chance of BTC price above $100K by New Year

New DeFi ‘passport’ could enable under-collateralized crypto loans

Arcx has launched a new version of its “DeFi Passport,” Sapphire, promising the pseudonymous on-chain credit check will enable new decentralized finance products.

Decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Arcx has announced the launch of Sapphire v3, a DeFi passport allowing crypto users to pseudonymously build and verify their reputation on-chain.

Announced June 2, the DeFi passport will score users on a scale between 0 and 1,000, with Arcx advancing that the passport “incentivizes reputation-building and curates on-chain identity into DeFi.”

In the absence of a DeFi passport, Arcx asserts that “protocols are left to treat every user the same, occasionally giving preferential consideration to wallet size, institutional backing, or restrictive KYC.”

Arcx expects its passport will be integrated onto many DeFi protocols, predicting Sapphire will allow projects to offer “low-collateral loans and high-yield farms” targeting users with high credit scores. As such, Arcx’s passport could facilitate growth in the emerging sector of DeFi-powered under-collateralized loans.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, the CEO and co-founder of institutional under-collateralized loan protocol Maple Finance, Sidney Powell, commented that “Arcx’s passport will help bring under-collateralized loans closer for retail DeFi users.”

Although Powell stated “there is no doubt that stickier reputations and identities would be positive for retail under-collateralized loans,” he speculates that the use of zero-knowledge proofs could bolster the passport’s adoption “by encouraging users to share off-chain information about themselves in the confidence that they maintain confidentiality.”

Powell added that the Sapphire passport should consider a loan’s “affordability,” stating:

“An address may have had a great record of repaying $10K loans on Compound, but how creditworthy would they be on a $250K loan? This is something Arcx can address over time with more data.” 

Looking forward, Arcx hopes to evaluate individual scores for a range of criteria, including their “Airdrop Score” and “Yield Farming Score” — which estimate the likelihood of an address holding onto airdropped or farms tokens over the longer term, and a “Governance Score’ that assesses whether an address is likely to participate in on-chain governance.

The protocol also aims to provide “Trader Scores” intended to ascertain whether a user is employing bots to execute trades, with Arcx suggesting DEXes could offer reduced trade fees to addresses verified not to be using bots.

Arcx also revealed it recently raised $1.3 million from top crypto investors including Dragonfly Capital and Scalar Capital, bringing its total sum raised to $8.2 million. Tom Schmidt of Dragonfly Capital stated:

“DeFi today is like the Wild West. People can walk up to any random protocol, front-run users, rack up a bunch of bad system debt, and bounce over to the next town. If we’re going to build a new global financial system, we’re going to need something better than the pseudonymous systems we have today.”

Bitcoin ‘wild’ odds see 85% chance of BTC price above $100K by New Year