Institutional-level 'Principal Protection Strategy' on the Blockchain: #BounceBitPrime allows ordinary people to become 'Qualified Investors'
In traditional finance, the strategy of 'annualized 5%+ principal protection' is exclusive to 'qualified investors'—with thresholds often in the millions of dollars, ordinary people find it hard to reach. However, #BounceBitPrime has 'broken down' these strategies and brought them onto the blockchain, allowing participation with just a few hundred dollars, enjoying the same profit opportunities as institutions.
Its 'structured products' are like 'financial Lego': combining different assets such as government bonds, stablecoins, and Bitcoin derivatives in proportion to design various options like 'low-risk principal protection', 'medium-risk balance', and 'high-risk high-return'. For example, in a 'principal protection' product, 90% of the funds are used to purchase government bonds (ensuring capital safety), and 10% is used for crypto arbitrage (seeking excess returns). Even if the crypto portion incurs significant losses, the interest from the government bonds can cover the costs, truly achieving 'a bottom line below, and no ceiling above'.
The underlying assets of these products are completely transparent: users can query the holding records of each government bond on-chain, the transaction details of the crypto strategies, and even view the execution prices on Coinbase INTX. This 'opening the black box' operation allows ordinary people to understand the profit logic of institutions, alleviating anxiety caused by 'not knowing the whereabouts of funds'.
$BB tokens are 'priority certificates': users who stake BB can have priority in subscribing to popular products and enjoy profit-sharing bonuses. For instance, when a certain 'institution-exclusive strategy' opens, $BB stakers can enter 24 hours in advance to seize high return quotas. @BounceBit is breaking the 'financial privilege': high-quality investment opportunities should not distinguish between 'ordinary people' and 'institutions,' but should allow everyone to participate fairly.