But seeing as BTC only has a 40% loan to value rate, the value of BTC would need to fall drastically (like 60%) for any kind of margin call-like situationan obvious failure case is if selling following margin calls causes the price to fall, eg as with portfolio insurance crash
I'm getting BTC, ETH, LINK, NEXO, BNB, and FTM, and the actual funds are coming from the interest paid by borrowers, after Nexo takes their cut.you're getting stable coins? which nexo dont issue? where do they get them from?
Right, not impossible.for now, unlikely, but not impossible
And they offer like 40 different assets, with variable rates.I'm getting BTC, ETH, LINK, NEXO, BNB, and FTM, and the actual funds are coming from the interest paid by borrowers, after Nexo takes their cut.
so like parallel loans from other borrowers?I'm getting BTC, ETH, LINK, NEXO, BNB, and FTM, and the actual funds are coming from the interest paid by borrowers, after Nexo takes their cut.
remember 2008. the crash that couldn't happen. when everything is "risk free" on paper it becomes systemic in practice. now, suppose that this model became (as in the imagined crypto end state) the "whole market"...Right, not impossible.
I don't understand parallel loans enough to definitively say, but that doesn't seem like the model Nexo is using. A borrower deposits collateral and pays the loan off over time, and the interest above the principal goes to Nexo and then gets passed along to depositors.so like parallel loans from other borrowers?
Yeah I agree in that its best not to sleep on the unknown unknown. Even if risk seems minimal.remember 2008. the crash that couldn't happen. when everything is "risk free" on paper it becomes systemic in practice. now, suppose that this model became (as in the imagined crypto end state) the "whole market"...
yes but your loan takes what form? stable coins which nexo have borrowed? and your repayments take what form? stable coins which nexo use to pay back their loans?I don't understand parallel loans enough to definitively say, but that doesn't seem like the model Nexo is using. A borrower deposits collateral and pays the loan off over time, and the interest above the principal goes to Nexo and then gets passed along to depositors.
its the risk which seems minimal which kills youYeah I agree in that its best not to sleep on the unknown unknown. Even if risk seems minimal.
The thing is, all of these assets are very liquid and can be exchanged for one another almost instantly. The loan is initially issued in stablecoins (although apparently they are now qualified to give loans in the form of certain fiat currencies, which I haven't tried), and the outstanding loan can be repaid in a variety of assets: BTC, stablecoins, fiat, etc.yes but your loan takes what form? stable coins which nexo have borrowed? and your repayments take what form? stable coins which nexo use to pay back their loans?
Yeah, cause it tempts you to sleep on it, to take it for granted that everything is fine.its the risk which seems minimal which kills you
They are issued stablecoins from some of the big stablecoin issuers. And there, the only one that concerns me is Tether. The other big stablecoins seem more compliant.nexo have to get those stable coins from somewhere, right?