Recently, I chatted with a few institutional friends, and they are all discussing a phenomenon:

Retail investors are still researching the next halving market,

And institutions have already started laying out plans for the financialization of Bitcoin.

📈 Why is this happening?

The popularity of Bitcoin ETFs is evident—over $100B AUM in a year, faster than the four-year accumulation of DeFi's TVL.

But an ETF is essentially an entry point for funds, not an exit for yields.

Next, the market needs a secure, transparent, and compliant yield layer to get these BTCs 'moving'.

🆕 The emergence of BTC+

On August 1, a Bitcoin yield vault called BTC+ went live for institutions:

• Basic yield rate of 5%-6%, with one-click deposits of native BTC, open to everyone.

• Locking assets also allows participation in a $100,000 $SOLV reward pool (the longer the time, the more rewards).

• Strategy stack: on-chain credit, LP, basis arbitrage, protocol incentives + real-world yields from BlackRock BUIDL and Hamilton Lane SCOPE.

• The only yield manager for Bitcoin assets on the Binance Earn platform.

• Chainlink PoR reserve proof, dual treasury structure, and an Islamic compliance version (potential $5T market).

🏦 Why is its layout significant?

• The goal is to capture 1% of the global Bitcoin supply ($1T+ scale), turning idle capital into compliant, yield-generating institutional assets.

• CeFi, DeFi, and TradFi are interconnected, allowing access for retail, institutions, and sovereign funds.

• Backed by multiple parties including the BNB Chain Foundation, Binance, and Amanie Advisors.

If the halving market is 'consensus-driven', then BTC+ is 'structure-driven'.

When there is enthusiasm for consensus, everyone comes in; once the structure is in place, latecomers can only buy at high prices.

Smart money always lays out its strategy one to two cycles in advance.

🔗 Official entry (direct deposit of native BTC):

https://app.solv.finance/btc+?network=ethereum

@Solv Protocol #btcunbound $SOLV