
The financial heavyweight—known for managing Tether’s massive U.S. Treasury reserve portfolio—has started offering loans backed by Bitcoin. It began with FalconX and Maple Finance.
This marks a significant step in institutional adoption of crypto. It could also pave the way for broader use of Bitcoin lending and Bitcoin as productive collateral.
Bridging Wall Street and DeFi
Cantor Fitzgerald’s crypto lending program signals growing confidence in Bitcoin’s role within traditional finance. By providing secured loans to digital asset firms like FalconX, a leading crypto brokerage, and Maple Finance, a blockchain-based credit marketplace, the firm is putting real capital to work in the crypto economy.
These are not just unsecured loans or speculative bets—they’re collateralized by Bitcoin. This structure lowers risk for lenders and increases liquidity for borrowers, enabling them to operate more effectively in the volatile crypto landscape. According to insiders, the goal is to expand access to credit without compromising financial stability.
JUST IN: CANTOR FITZGERALD UNVEILS $2B #BITCOIN LENDING PLATFORM
FIRST LOANS COMPLETED — WALL STREET IS ALL IN. pic.twitter.com/QNln1ZzPYS
— The Moon Show (@TheMoonShow) May 27, 2025
The partnership comes as stablecoins like Tether, for which Cantor manages billions in U.S. Treasuries, continue to rise in prominence. Tether recently surpassed a $100 billion market cap, signaling investor appetite for blockchain-based alternatives to fiat currencies.
A New Lending Trend Gains Traction
Bitcoin-backed loans aren’t new, but institutional participation at this level is. For years, firms like Genesis and BlockFi offered crypto-collateralized loans primarily to retail and small institutional clients. But with Cantor Fitzgerald stepping in, the game has changed. Here is an example of how people is getting Bitcoin loans in Coinbase:
For anyone curious, this is what my $BTC-backed loan on $COIN looks like.
Interest rates have been averaging pretty close to 6%. You get liquidated at 86% LTV. Was super easy to set up & use.
Your Bitcoin gets wrapped on $ETH (not taxable) though… Definitely not for everyone.… pic.twitter.com/RrbG26mfWi
— BitMaster
(@BitMasterK) May 20, 2025
This move mirrors a broader trend: increasing tokenization of financial services. As more firms explore blockchain-backed products, Bitcoin is finding new utility beyond holding and trading. According to a 2024 report from Galaxy Digital, tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) could represent a $10 trillion market by the end of the decade. Bitcoin, long considered digital gold, is now being repurposed as a credit asset.
By supporting firms like Maple Finance, which enables undercollateralized lending through blockchain rails, Cantor is also signaling support for decentralized finance (DeFi) models, albeit through a more controlled and compliant route.
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