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Crypto Lender Ledn Goes Full Bitcoin Maxi as It Seeks to Reduce Client Asset Risk

Ledn said the shift is part of its broader strategy to simplify its product and sharpen its focus around bitcoin.

May 23, 2025, 1:00 p.m.
Ledn co-founders Mauricio Di Bartolomeo (left) and Adam Reeds (Ledn)
Ledn co-founders Mauricio Di Bartolomeo (left) and Adam Reeds (Ledn)

What to know:

  • Cryptocurrency lender Ledn is removing support for ether and will begin offering a bitcoin-only loan model.
  • Ledn will also stop lending client assets to generate yield as it seeks to remove risk its business model.

Cryptocurrency lender Ledn is removing support for ether and will begin offering a bitcoin-only loan model starting July 1 as it looks to simplify its product and sharpen its focus around bitcoin .

The Cayman Islands-registered company may be attempting to broaden its appeal among the corners of the crypto community that say BTC is the only cryptocurrency that is needed. Such BTC advocates are often referred to as "Bitcoin Maxis."

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“With our new hyper-focus on Bitcoin-only lending, we’re going back to our roots and principles that inspired Bitcoin to begin with,” co-founder Adam Reeds said in an emailed announcement on Friday.

Ledn will also stop lending client assets to generate yield as it seeks to remove risk from its business model. Bitcoin offered to Ledn as collateral for loans will remain fully in its custody or that of its partners, Ledn said.

"Traditional finance relies on constantly reusing client assets to create leverage and, ultimately, inflation," Reeds said. "Bitcoiners instinctively reject that model."

Cryptocurrency lending was a major casualty of crypto winter in 2022, with the companies including BlockFi, Voyager, Celsius and Genesis going to the wall.

Ledn managed to survive and is now attempting to resurrect the BTC-backed lending sector, with its simplified product offering and helped by the friendlier regulatory approach to crypto in the U.S, co-founder Mauricio Di Bartolomeo told CoinDesk in a recent interview.

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Hong Kong remains committed to digital assets but feels competition from an ‘aggressive’ UAE

From left to right, Johnny Ng, founder of web3 investment firm Goldford; Joseph Chan, under secretary for financial services and the Treasury in Hong Kong; Gary Liu, co-founder & CEO Terminal 3 (moderator)

Dubai and Abu Dhabi have established a solid regulatory framework for virtual assets, and each region has brought this under the auspices of a single, dedicated regulatory authority.

What to know:

  • Hong Kong could take lessons from the UAE and Korea regarding crypto regulation, said a member of the China National Committee, speaking at Consensus Hong Kong.
  • The undersecretary from Hong Kong's Treasury said an enduring attraction of Hong Kong is that there are “no surprises” from regulators.