Silicon Valley Bank says Bitcoin lending is growing up
The $BTC lending market that imploded with Celsius, BlockFi and Genesis in 2022 is quietly rebuilding, and this time on very different foundations. A new report from @SiliconVlyBank argues th
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AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 29, 2026
2 min read
NEWS
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The $BTC lending market that imploded with Celsius, BlockFi and Genesis in 2022 is quietly rebuilding, and this time on very different foundations. A new report from @SiliconVlyBank argues that what was once a lightly regulated corner of crypto is now adopting the conventions of traditional finance: overcollateralized loans, transparent risk management and conservative underwriting.
A Market Rebuilt on Stronger Ground
The numbers back the narrative. According to Silicon Valley Bank, citing Galaxy Research data, total crypto-backed lending reached $67 billion in Q1 2026, a 49% increase year over year. The failures of Celsius, BlockFi and Genesis were defining moments. Each firm shared common vulnerabilities: maturity mismatches, excessive leverage and the rehypothecation of customer assets. Today's lenders have responded by requiring borrowers to post significantly more collateral than they borrow in dollars, and by monitoring that collateral continuously.
A landmark deal underlines how far the market has come. In February 2026, lending firm Ledn closed a $188 million Bitcoin-backed asset-backed security, the first Bitcoin-collateralized deal to receive an investment-grade rating from S&P Global. That kind of institutional credibility was unthinkable at the height of the 2022 crisis.
Costs Remain High, But Change Is Coming
Borrowing is still expensive. SVB puts current annualized rates for Bitcoin-backed loans at between 7.5% and 16%, well above comparable traditional credit products. But the bank expects that spread to narrow as mainstream banks and private credit funds enter the market. Several major U.S. banks now offer Bitcoin-backed credit facilities, and JPMorgan has reportedly been considering similar products for institutional clients.
SVB also flagged the Lightning Network as a potential efficiency driver, noting that near-instant, low-cost collateral transfers and automated margin calls could make Bitcoin-backed lending more scalable within established financial markets.
The consumer slice of the market remains modest, estimated by Ledn at around $3 billion today. But the firm has argued that figure could scale toward $1 trillion over the next decade as long-term $BTC holders seek liquidity without selling their coins. For now, SVB's report signals that the infrastructure to support that kind of growth is finally being put in place.
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