#Bitlayer @BitlayerLabs
As the Bitcoin ecosystem continues to heat up, @BitlayerLabs Bitlayer is becoming the focus of more and more people's attention.
Why? Because it is not just a Bitcoin second-layer network, but more like a 'community-built stage'.
Here:
• Developers can quickly deploy applications and explore more possibilities of BTC;
• Ordinary users can also participate with low barriers, enjoy fast and low-cost transactions, and experience a rich world of DeFi and NFTs.
This is not just 'scaling', but an awakening of the ecosystem. Bitcoin is no longer just a 'store of value', but a fertile ground for innovation. Bitlayer is laying a solid foundation for this future.
If Bitcoin is digital gold, then Bitlayer is the bridge that truly makes gold 'flow'. Join this journey and witness the next era of Bitcoin together!
Macroscopic perspective: BTCFi's 'Term Transformation'
As the proportion of institutions holding BTC increases, the low turnover issue of assets 'only rising but not moving' becomes more apparent: unrealized profits on the books cannot generate stable income, while liabilities require predictable cash flow.
Bitlayer's entry point is 'term transformation + risk unbundling':
• Bringing BTC into the programmable financial system in the form of YBTC;
• Splitting yield, liquidity, and liquidation priority;
• Serving the funding needs of different durations and risk preferences.
If Bitlayer can provide transparent liquidation rules, cross-chain risk isolation, and auditable funding paths, it can meet the three major demands of compliant funds:
1. Measurable
2. Hedgeable
3. Exitable
Regulatory-friendly bridging and liquidation design will be the prerequisite for institutions to increase their allocation of BTC. In the long run, BTCFi will not replace the narrative of spot value, but extend 'store of value' into 'value production'.
In this coordinate system, @BitlayerLabs is pushing Bitcoin from a 'static asset' to a 'dynamic asset'.
Bitlayer's ultimate goal: to become a public infrastructure that is usable by institutions, loved by developers, and desired by users.