$TREE Ecosystem is building the 'fixed income highway' for DeFi

As institutional capital begins to enter the crypto market on a large scale, what they need most is not high risk and high returns, but fixed income tools like those in traditional finance— the Treehouse protocol developed by @Treehouse Official is building this 'fixed income highway' with the $TREE ecosystem, becoming the preferred platform for institutional entry.

The core demand of institutional capital is very clear: predictable returns, controllable risks, and standardized operations. The design of Treehouse perfectly aligns with these needs: tAssets serve as standardized income certificates, allowing institutions to manage crypto assets like they would manage bonds; the DOR mechanism ensures that interest rates are determined by the market, avoiding artificial fluctuations; transparent on-chain data meets compliance audit requirements. Currently, several crypto institutions have allocated assets through Treehouse, pushing its TVL to exceed 500 million USD, and this is just the beginning of the institutional entry wave #Treehouse .

TREE plays the role of a 'pass' in the institutional ecosystem: institutions need to hold a certain amount of TREE to unlock large transaction channels and customized income strategies; participating in TREE governance can influence the direction of the protocol's development and safeguard their own interests. As traditional financial institutions accelerate their layout in crypto, the value of Treehouse as the 'fixed income entry' will become increasingly prominent, while TREE, as the ecological hub, will directly benefit from the scale effect brought by institutional capital.

#Treehouse is becoming the 'first stop' for institutional entry.

The standardized design of #Treehouse aligns with institutional compliance needs.

The 500 million TVL of #Treehouse has already made significant contributions from institutional capital. Incorporating crypto assets into institutional fixed income portfolios.

#Treehouse proves that what institutions need is 'reliable' rather than 'stimulating'.