
BOB (“Build on Bitcoin”) has introduced an innovative framework that allows bitcoin holders to secure stablecoin loans against their BTC while maintaining its safety on the Bitcoin network.
The Bitcoin Vault Liquidation Engine tackles ongoing issues in bitcoin lending, including all-or-nothing liquidations and lengthy settlement periods, as outlined by founder Alexei Zamyatin in a Telegram message to CoinDesk.
A vault refers to a smart contract that safely locks in a user’s cryptocurrency as collateral for a loan.
This mechanism acts as a trustless escrow, automatically managing collateral and executing a liquidation (asset sale) if its value drops too low.
Leveraging this for bitcoin could revolutionize the most secure and largest crypto asset into active collateral, freeing up trillions in BTC liquidity for decentralized finance (DeFi) usage without necessitating sales by holders.
BOB’s framework enables partial liquidations, allowing only the necessary collateral to be liquidated to restore loan health, rather than liquidating an entire position.
The liquidation process can also be completed in 10-60 minutes, significantly faster than the multi-day liquidations typical with BitVM, the computing paradigm used by projects like BOB to execute smart contracts on Bitcoin.
The challenge remains to develop a smart contract-enabled DeFi experience comparable to what users expect on other chains, such as Ethereum.
By permitting lending protocols on any chain to utilize native BTC as collateral, BOB seeks to broaden Bitcoin-backed borrowing beyond wrapped assets like wBTC.
The team believes this innovation could unlock “billions in dormant Bitcoin liquidity,” bridging Bitcoin’s $2.2 trillion market with global on-chain credit systems and promoting the larger Bitcoin DeFi (BTCFi) movement.
BOB is among several key projects in the BTCFi arena, focused on unlocking BTC liquidity to enhance the broader blockchain finance ecosystem. Other initiatives include Bitcoin programmability layer Hemi and the BTC restaking protocol Babylon.
UPDATE (Oct. 28, 15:10 UTC): This version includes a final paragraph highlighting additional notable projects in BTCFi.
