Yeah you are able to repay loans in fiat, but I haven't held any fiat on Nexo before.they get paid in dollars, is that what your saying, sometimes?
This site claims 244, but I haven't confirmed elsewhere.do you know how many ppl work for them?
As I understand it, nobody needs to be lending them dollars for their ongoing business model to work.who is lending them dollars?
Also here I'm not sure I agree. Sure, if crypto somehow crashes worse than it ever has (which would be saying something), outstanding loans would be liquidated due to depreciating collateral. I'd imagine such worse-case scenarios would effect interest rates paid to depositors, but I don't quite see how it would compromise the actual assets of the depositors, aside from the market-wide depreciation of course.but look, if they have dollar liabilities then they're potentially screwed if crypto crashes
Yeah and my instinct there is just that they sold some amount of their portfolio to get enough dollars in their liquidity pool system to allow whatever degree of dollar operations their platform experiences. That is, I don't think the dollars they have are necessarily borrowed. It's definitely possible though, although I'd imagine that would be riskier.if they have dollars to lend, which you've said they have, then they must have come from somewhere
bc if you're liabilities are fixed in dollars and your assets are collapsing in dollar value, that creates a problemAlso here I'm not sure I agree. Sure, if crypto somehow crashes worse than it ever has (which would be saying something), outstanding loans would be liquidated due to depreciating collateral. I'd imagine such worse-case scenarios would effect interest rates paid to depositors, but I don't quite see how it would compromise the actual assets of the depositors, aside from the market-wide depreciation of course.
I agree, that is a problem. And it's possible. But on the assets side, at least overcollateralized loans are safer than uncollateralized loans in this crash scenario, as far as depositors are concerned, even fiat depositors, if I understand correctly. Even if that just means slightly more of a buffer for depositors.bc if you're liabilities are fixed in dollars and your assets are collapsing in dollar value, that creates a problem
so you think they're selling the loan on to raise dollars?Yeah and my instinct there is just that they sold some amount of their portfolio to get enough dollars in their liquidity pool system to allow whatever degree of dollar operations their platform experiences. That is, I don't think the dollars they have are necessarily borrowed. It's definitely possible though, although I'd imagine that would be riskier.
I'd guess they are selling some of their proceeds from loan interest to raise dollars, to build a dollar liquidity pool, which could be considered overhead.so you think they're selling the loan on to raise dollars?