Bitcoin’s trillion-dollar market has long been viewed as an untapped goldmine for DeFi developers. While Ethereum pioneered decentralized finance and subsequent smart contract chains picked up the baton, Bitcoin – the world’s most secure and liquid cryptocurrency – has remained largely isolated from this on-chain revolution.
The reasons for this are self-evident: no native smart contract support, slow block times, and high fees. The Bitcoin network is great for storing and transmitting Bitcoin. But try to do anything else with it and its limitations are quickly exposed. But DeFi builders love a challenge and hate being told “no” and it was thus inevitable that somehow, sooner or later, they’d attempt to make Bitcoin DeFi a reality.
In the event, it’s taken longer than many people expected to create a fully working DeFi ecosystem on Bitcoin rails. It’s also taken the creation of dedicated layer 2s such as Stacks to provide the scalability Bitcoin’s main chain can’t supply – which is something that was very much expected. But it takes more than merely a purpose-built chain to make Bitcoin DeFi take off: there also needs to be a way to safely bridge BTC to Layer 2 without incurring custodial or smart contract risk.
In sBTC, Stacks believes it’s finally solved that challenge, slotting the last piece into the puzzle. But is sBTC really the missing link required to catalyze Bitcoin DeFi? And if it’s not, what will it take to move the needle for decentralized finance on Bitcoin infra?
Connecting the Chains
The entire value proposition of DeFi is rooted in composability: the ability of different protocols and assets to interact. It’s a concept that can be likened to building bridges between islands. Each island (blockchain) has unique resources: one might have fertile soil (robust developer tools), while another has valuable minerals (deep liquidity). If they can’t trade, they can’t prosper together.
If each blockchain remains isolated, we lose out on the network effects of combining the best features of different systems. And Bitcoin is the largest and most desirable island of all. Yet its trillion-dollar market sits untouched by the innovative DeFi solutions springing up on newer networks. Similarly, those DeFi networks miss out on Bitcoin’s unparalleled liquidity and security.
But it’s one thing to identify the problem – it’s quite another to solve it. Since Bitcoin’s protocol can’t be easily upgraded (and on the rare occasions when it occurs, such as with Taproot, the changes are subtle rather than radical), Layer 2s or sidechains are the obvious way to address this. And they’ve duly sprung up in recent years, with Stacks just one of many L2s competing to create Bitcoin DeFi on purpose-built networks.
Having launched in 2021, Stacks is also one of the oldest Bitcoin L2s on the market. It’s deliberately taken the slow and steady route to building out its ecosystem and it wasn’t until last year, with the Nakamoto upgrade, that the L2 really became ready for serious onchain action. While this update introduced a host of improvements, the main change was the introduction of sBTC, allowing Stacks to realize the vision it had been working towards all along: non-custodial bitcoin, fully unleashed on Layer 2.
Unlocking Bitcoin’s DeFi Potential With sBTC
sBTC is a 1:1 backed Bitcoin asset on the Stacks layer, allowing BTC to be used across DeFi protocols without requiring centralized custody. Unlike traditional tokenized BTC solutions, sBTC is secured by Bitcoin’s proof-of-work consensus, ensuring that transactions remain trustless and verifiable. Its introduction means that Bitcoin holders can now provide liquidity in DeFi protocols, earn yield through lending and staking, and participate in onchain trading without leaving the Bitcoin ecosystem.
As for how sBTC is created, the user sends BTC to the Stacks network, minting an equivalent amount of sBTC. When the user wants to return to BTC, they can swap sBTC back at a 1:1 ratio. This process preserves decentralization while unlocking Bitcoin’s ability to engage with DeFi, making it a superior alternative to custodial solutions – which have constituted the majority of all tokenized BTC up until now.
The coming years will determine whether Bitcoin’s vast liquidity will be unlocked in a decentralized manner – or whether it’s destined to remain an underutilized store of value. As the value of Bitcoin rises, and the number of ways in which it can be used to generate yield on L2s such as Stack increases, the temptation to participate in Bitcoin DeFi and reap the rewards may prove irresistible.
As Satoshi Nakamoto acutely observed many years ago, “it might make sense just to get some [bitcoin] in case it catches on.” The same remark can now be applied to sBTC.