| > It's a new era of finance I have no experience with crypto, but this I don't understand. > DeFi is unlocking the value of an asset, making it liquid... Like a mortgage or a bond issuance (bonds are secured against assets of the corporation)? > Credit is loaning you money and providing an interest rate. Usually something insane like 15%. Average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage in the US is about 4%[1]. Average Aaa corporate bond yield is 3.43%[2]. I guess that you are talking about interest rate on credit cards? I think that credit card debt is pretty small compared to the size of the mortgage or bond markets. > One example is on Kaurura... I'm not sure I follow you here, but it sounds like you get a loan at 19% APR against some collateral. Then you use the loan as capital for some other investment at a higher rate of return. My question: how is this any different, for example, from a company issuing bonds at 4% coupon rate and using the proceeds to fund operations when the company's profit margin is, say, 50%? Let's say it's a matter of scale; I, as a person, can't issue bonds to trade on a public market. But I can get a mortgage and invest in other stuff hopefully at a return higher than the rate on the loan. As I said, I don't understand how this is a "new era of finance". [1] https://www.valuepenguin.com/mortgages/average-mortgage-rate.... [2] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/AAA |
>how is this any different, for example, from a company issuing bonds at 4% coupon rate and using the proceeds to fund operations when the company's profit margin is, say, 50%?
It's nothing like that. Because A.) It's not getting people to loan me money. Company issuing bonds at 4% has to pay that 4% to get access to their assets because it's 'Risky'. In the blockchain there is no risk because they have constant oracle access to the price of the underlying asset so i can do it for free, with no counter party. Simple a piece of code collectively floating on thousands of nodes running around the world.