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Galaxy Digital launches onchain lending platform for institutions

Galaxy Digital has launched an institutional lending platform designed to connect large borrowers with liquidity from decentralized finance markets while keeping Galaxy as the sole counterparty they face.

The new service, built around a benchmark called the Galaxy Onchain Financing Rate, or GOFR, gives approved clients a single blended borrowing rate sourced from major onchain lending protocols, including Aave, Morpho, Spark, and Kamino. Instead of requiring institutions to manage wallet infrastructure, smart-contract approvals, collateral movement, and protocol-specific risks on their own, Galaxy will handle those operations internally and lend to clients directly.

The platform marks a significant attempt to package decentralized finance liquidity into a format that resembles traditional institutional credit. Galaxy said the product is aimed at accredited participants seeking access to floating onchain borrowing rates without the operational burden of dealing directly with decentralized protocols.

Under the structure, borrowers receive credit from Galaxy, while Galaxy manages the underlying DeFi positions that fund the loans. The company said GOFR consolidates variable lending costs across several onchain markets into one aggregated benchmark. Galaxy also plans to publish seven-day and thirty-day averages of the rate, creating a public reference point for borrowing costs in USDC, USDT, and ETH.

The move comes as digital-asset lenders, asset managers, and trading firms look for new ways to bridge institutional finance and DeFi after several years of market stress, tighter risk controls, and uneven liquidity across crypto credit markets.

Galaxy said it will allocate up to $100 million of its own capital as first-loss protection for the lending program. That means Galaxy would absorb initial losses before other capital is affected, a structure intended to give borrowers and funding partners more confidence in the platform’s risk controls. The company also said it will use safety mechanisms that can halt new lending when internal thresholds are triggered.

The minimum credit line starts at $1 million, with adjustable loan durations. Borrowers will be able to post native bitcoin as collateral, and Galaxy will manage any required wrapping operations on their behalf. Wrapped bitcoin is commonly used in DeFi because most decentralized lending protocols operate on networks where native Bitcoin does not move directly.

The company said custody, wallet management, and smart-contract interactions will be handled by Galaxy, reducing the need for clients to build internal DeFi operations or directly interact with complex blockchain-based lending systems.

A structured path into DeFi credit

The GOFR platform is intended to solve a long-running problem in institutional crypto lending: DeFi markets can offer deep liquidity and transparent rates, but they also require specialized technical execution.

Onchain lending protocols generally operate through automated smart contracts. Borrowers deposit collateral, draw stablecoins or other digital assets, and face liquidation if collateral values fall too far. Rates fluctuate based on supply and demand in each lending market. For experienced DeFi users, those mechanics are familiar. For larger firms with compliance, custody, and operational controls, direct participation can be difficult.

Galaxy’s new model places the company between the borrower and the protocols. Clients do not need to decide whether to borrow from Aave, Morpho, Spark, or Kamino individually. They also do not need to rebalance across platforms as rates move. Galaxy aggregates those markets and provides a single rate through GOFR.

That structure could appeal to desks that need digital-asset credit but do not want direct smart-contract exposure. It may also attract firms that are comfortable with Galaxy as a counterparty but less comfortable operating directly in decentralized systems.

The public reporting of GOFR averages could also become important if the rate gains market use. Traditional finance relies heavily on reference rates that allow loans, derivatives, and structured transactions to be priced consistently. Crypto lending has often lacked a widely accepted institutional benchmark for onchain borrowing costs. Galaxy is trying to create one by blending rates across multiple DeFi venues and publishing historical averages.

A seven-day average may help smooth short-term volatility, while a thirty-day average could provide a broader view of funding conditions. Borrowing rates in DeFi can move quickly when demand rises, collateral values shift, or liquidity leaves a protocol. A public benchmark may help traders and credit desks compare private loan terms against broader market conditions.

Bitcoin collateral without direct protocol exposure

One notable feature of the lending platform is its treatment of bitcoin collateral.

Bitcoin remains the largest digital asset by market value, but it does not natively operate inside most DeFi lending markets. To use bitcoin in those systems, holders typically rely on wrapped versions of the asset that can move on other blockchains. Wrapping can involve custody, bridging, token issuance, and additional operational risks.

Galaxy said borrowers can post native bitcoin, while the company performs any wrapping required to deploy collateral across onchain venues. For institutions that hold bitcoin but do not want to manage wrapped tokens directly, that arrangement may simplify access to stablecoin or ether-denominated credit.

The structure also reflects the broader evolution of bitcoin-backed lending. During earlier crypto credit cycles, many lenders offered dollar or stablecoin loans backed by bitcoin collateral. Some of those models came under pressure when asset prices fell and unsecured or undercollateralized exposures created losses across the sector. Newer lending models are placing more emphasis on collateralization, transparency, and automated risk management.

Galaxy is positioning GOFR as a more controlled version of onchain credit access, with the firm managing execution and standing between clients and DeFi infrastructure.

Risk controls and first-loss capital

Galaxy’s commitment of up to $100 million in first-loss capital is central to the platform’s design.

First-loss protection is often used in structured credit to absorb initial losses and reduce risk for other participants. In this case, Galaxy is signaling that it has capital at risk alongside the platform’s users and counterparties. The size of that allocation is also notable because DeFi lending markets can experience rapid changes in collateral values and liquidity.

The company said it will deploy safety mechanisms that stop new lending if risk limits are reached. Such controls may be especially important in onchain markets, where liquidations can occur automatically and where liquidity can shift quickly during periods of volatility.

Risks remain. DeFi lending protocols can face smart-contract bugs, oracle failures, governance changes, liquidity shortages, and volatile rate movements. Borrowing through an intermediary can reduce operational complexity for clients, but it does not eliminate underlying market risk. Galaxy’s role is to manage those risks internally and determine how much can be passed through safely to borrowers under the GOFR structure.

The model also depends on Galaxy’s own risk management and balance sheet strength. If market conditions deteriorate sharply, the firm’s ability to manage collateral, move between protocols, and absorb losses will be closely watched.

DeFi liquidity has declined, but activity remains large

Galaxy’s launch comes at a mixed moment for decentralized finance.

Fresh market data showed total value locked across DeFi networks had fallen to about $71.7 billion by mid-June 2026, reflecting a pullback from automated yield strategies and broader caution among crypto market participants. Total value locked, often called TVL, measures the amount of assets deposited in DeFi protocols. A decline can indicate lower risk appetite, falling token prices, withdrawals from lending venues, or all three.

The drop suggests that many users have reduced exposure to automated lending, borrowing, trading, and yield-generation contracts. Lower TVL can also affect available liquidity, especially in smaller protocols where large withdrawals may have a bigger impact on borrowing costs and collateral markets.

At the same time, stablecoin activity remains substantial. Stablecoin transfers topped $52.9 trillion over the previous year, showing that dollar-linked digital tokens continue to serve as a major settlement and funding tool across crypto markets. Stablecoins such as USDC and USDT are widely used for trading, lending, payments, and collateral management.

That contrast is important for Galaxy’s product. Even if fewer assets are locked in DeFi strategies overall, stablecoin usage remains high. Large credit intermediaries can attempt to tap those markets while offering institutional borrowers a more familiar structure. In periods when smaller onchain venues face thin liquidity or rising rates, borrowers may prefer a larger counterparty that can aggregate supply and provide clearer risk controls.

Competition in institutional onchain lending

Galaxy is not the only firm exploring structured access to DeFi lending.

Over the past year, comparable lending programs have emerged across digital-asset finance. One such platform launched in 2025 and surpassed $1 billion in onchain loans within eight months by sourcing collateralized credit from Morpho. That growth showed that some professional borrowers are willing to use DeFi-sourced credit when it is wrapped in an institutional operating model.

The broader trend is clear: firms are trying to convert fragmented onchain liquidity into products that resemble traditional financing lines. Instead of asking borrowers to interact with individual protocols, these services package decentralized liquidity into managed credit facilities.

Galaxy’s version differs in its attempt to establish a public benchmark through GOFR. If the rate gains adoption, it could help standardize how onchain borrowing costs are discussed and compared. That would be useful for traders, lenders, corporate treasuries, and funds that need a consistent reference point for digital-asset financing.

Still, the benchmark’s credibility will depend on transparency, methodology, and actual usage. Market participants will likely examine how the rate is calculated, how much volume sits behind it, which protocols are included, and how Galaxy handles sudden rate spikes or liquidity shifts.

Galaxy’s broader lending and infrastructure business

The new platform builds on Galaxy’s existing institutional lending operations.

The company already offers bitcoin-backed loans, specialized financing for bitcoin miners, and products backed by derivatives collateral. Its lending business sits alongside broader operations in trading, asset management, advisory services, mining-related finance, and infrastructure.

Galaxy has also expanded into data-center partnerships and computing infrastructure, reflecting a wider push beyond pure digital-asset trading and lending. That diversification has become more relevant as crypto firms seek steadier revenue sources across market cycles.

For the first quarter of 2026, Galaxy reported a net loss of $216 million, driven mainly by lower digital-asset valuations. The result highlighted the continued effect of crypto price swings on firms with balance sheet exposure to digital assets and related businesses.

The company’s U.S.-listed shares traded at $23.72 on Tuesday, up about 1.5 percent. Galaxy held roughly $9 billion in total assets at the end of March, giving it a sizeable base from which to support lending, infrastructure, and trading operations.

That balance sheet will be important as the firm scales GOFR. Institutional credit products require not only technology and market access, but also liquidity, capital support, and the ability to withstand sharp moves in collateral prices.

Why the benchmark matters

The most important part of Galaxy’s announcement may not be the launch of another lending product, but the effort to turn changing DeFi borrowing costs into a daily institutional reference rate.

Onchain lending rates can vary widely between protocols and assets. A borrower seeking USDC on one platform may face a different rate from a borrower using another venue. Rates can also change quickly when large positions enter or leave the market. That fragmentation makes it harder for credit desks to know whether a loan is priced fairly.

GOFR attempts to simplify that picture. By combining rates from several major protocols and publishing rolling averages, Galaxy is trying to create a baseline for the cost of onchain leverage. If widely followed, the rate could influence loan negotiations, collateral strategies, and funding decisions across the digital-asset market.

For active traders with debt positions, the benchmark may provide a way to compare their current borrowing costs against a broader market measure. If a private lending rate sits well above GOFR, a borrower may seek better terms. If GOFR rises sharply, it may signal tighter liquidity, stronger demand for stablecoins, or greater stress in credit markets.

The benchmark may also help traditional companies assess whether DeFi-sourced lending is competitive with other forms of financing. Many firms have avoided direct DeFi use because of technical complexity, compliance concerns, and uncertainty around custody. A single counterparty model could make the market easier to evaluate.

A test of institutional demand

Galaxy’s platform arrives at a time when institutional crypto credit is still rebuilding trust.

The failures and disruptions of previous market cycles pushed many firms toward more conservative lending structures. Collateral quality, counterparty risk, transparency, and liquidity management have become central concerns. Products that promise high yields without clear risk controls are likely to face greater scrutiny than they did during earlier bull markets.

GOFR is designed for that environment. It does not ask borrowers to become DeFi operators. It offers a single lending relationship, a blended rate, internal custody and execution, bitcoin collateral handling, first-loss capital, and risk triggers. Those features are meant to make onchain finance more accessible to firms that want exposure to its liquidity but not its operational complexity.

The market’s response will depend on pricing, reliability, and execution. If Galaxy can offer competitive rates while managing DeFi risks effectively, the platform may become a meaningful channel between institutional borrowers and decentralized liquidity. If rates are not attractive, or if market stress exposes weaknesses in the structure, adoption may be slower.

For now, the launch shows how digital-asset finance is moving toward hybrid models. DeFi remains open, automated, and fragmented. Institutional borrowers often want managed access, trusted counterparties, and clear benchmarks. Galaxy is betting that the next phase of crypto lending will combine both approaches.


Explore how institutional DeFi credit is evolving in 2026—read this in-depth analysis on on-chain private credit migration.

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