You can earn without trading coins; #HumaFinance allows HUMA to earn through 'services'

Some buy tokens hoping for a 'pump', but users of #HumaFinance understand: HUMA earns through 'real services'—Kenyans use the platform to receive remittances, and the money from transaction fees is used to repurchase HUMA; Filipinos borrow money for goods, and the repayment also repurchases $HUMA . This logic of 'the more services, the more valuable the tokens' is much more reliable than trading coins.

Traditional tokens rely on 'telling stories'; HUMA relies on 'counting bills': the platform processes how many remittances and how many loans per day, how much fee is charged per transaction, half of which is used to repurchase HUMA—this data is all verifiable on-chain, without guessing 'whether the big players are offloading'. For example, on a certain day, if #HumaFinance has 10,000 cross-border remittances with an average fee of $5 per transaction, that results in $25,000 used to buy and burn HUMA; if there are 5,000 loans with a fee of $10 per transaction, that adds another $25,000—these genuine repurchases are the foundation for HUMA's appreciation.

@Huma Finance 🟣 has thoroughly developed 'services': helping workers in India send money home, reducing costs by 90%; helping farmers in Bangladesh borrow money to buy seeds, with interest rates 80% lower than loan sharks. These services make users dependent on it—some have said after six months, 'Now, I only recognize #HumaFinance for remittances; the money saved on fees is enough to buy my child two books.' The higher the user retention, the more frequent the transactions, the more sustainable the repurchase and burn of $HUMA ; this is a cycle of 'the more services, the more profits'.

Currently, #HumaFinance has a bad debt rate of only 0.3% in 12 countries, indicating reliable services and willingness from users to repay, enabling the platform to continuously earn transaction fees. This is more effective than any 'positive news'. HumaFinance proves with $HUMA : tokens don’t need to rely on trading; if services are done well, the money will come naturally.