Recently, friends paying attention to on-chain lending and stablecoin wealth management should have noticed an interesting phenomenon—arbitrage operations through lending protocols and financial products on exchanges via BNB Chain seem to be able to create a relatively stable income chain.



First, let's talk about why this topic is so hot right now. As the main lending protocol on BNB Chain, a leading platform currently has over $4.3 billion in assets locked, making it the largest USD1 ecosystem center on-chain. Their liquidity staking products (such as slisBNB and slisBNBx) have allowed many participants to earn substantial actual returns through activities like Launchpool and Megadrop. This wave has sparked enthusiasm among many to get involved more deeply.

So, how exactly does it work? Let me break down the practical process.

**Step 1: Prepare the underlying assets.** Choosing top assets like BTCB, ETH, and BNB as collateral is the safest approach, as they tend to have relatively low volatility and high liquidity. Suppose you prepare 1 BTCB (currently worth about $60,000), which will serve as the foundation for subsequent operations.

**Step 2: Enter the lending phase.** After connecting your wallet, deposit your BTCB into the protocol's collateral page, then choose to borrow USD1 stablecoins. A key point here—borrowing interest rates are roughly around 1%, but you need to monitor collateralization ratios, generally recommended to stay below 70%, to effectively avoid liquidation risks.

**Step 3: Cross over to the exchange side.** Withdraw the borrowed USD1 from the chain to a leading exchange (remember to choose a compatible chain, BSC is the most convenient), then go to the platform's Earn section. There, high-yield stablecoin wealth management products can sometimes offer annualized returns of 18%-20%. Just select a suitable lock-up period.

**Looking at the actual profit calculation:** Suppose you borrow 10,000 USD1 with a 1% cost. With an annualized return of 20% on the exchange's wealth management, the annual interest on the loan is 100 USD1, and the annual wealth management income is 2,000 USD1. The net annualized profit is 1,900 USD1, which is about a 19% net annualized return.

The reason this chain can work is simple—there's a clear interest spread between borrowing costs and wealth management returns. Of course, in actual operations, factors like liquidation risk, withdrawal fees, and token price volatility need to be considered, but the overall idea is as described. Many people are now deploying such strategies, and the timing is indeed good.
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RugpullTherapistvip
· 2h ago
19% annualized return sounds great, but I just want to ask, why has such a stable arbitrage been completely taken over by institutions so early?
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bridge_anxietyvip
· 2h ago
A 19% net annualized return sounds a bit unbelievable. Can it really be consistently profitable?
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UncommonNPCvip
· 6h ago
Wait, 19% annualized return is so stable? I feel like something's not right... Can the liquidation risk really be controlled?
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ContractFreelancervip
· 01-07 13:49
It looks like everyone is copying homework. An 18% annualized return sounds great, but can it really be stable in the long run?
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GasBankruptervip
· 01-07 13:48
This idea is good, but the risk is really underestimated. Once the liquidation line is triggered, it will directly lead to liquidation—it's no joke.
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HypotheticalLiquidatorvip
· 01-07 13:41
70% collateralization ratio? Brother, you're playing with fire. A 20% correction in the coin price could trigger a chain of liquidations, and your health factor would instantly collapse. The words sound nice, but what is the basis for that 20% return on investment? Has the exchange ever collapsed this year? A 13% net profit sounds good, but in practice, you need to consider the cost of leverage... You haven't even figured out where the liquidation price is. Interest rate spreads are often the breeding ground for the next wave of systemic risk. Low interest rates don't mean high risk control thresholds. Don't be brainwashed by market sentiment. This wave of hype itself is a red flag. Are those who operated like this in the previous two rounds still alive? The dominoes are already lined up; it just depends on who pushes the first one over. Good data looks nice, but when volatility kicks in, your plan is immediately invalidated. Wait before entering again; this market isn't that urgent. USD1 stablecoin itself is a fragile assumption. Don't use your own money to test it.
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StrawberryIcevip
· 01-07 13:38
The interest spread looks good, but the key question is who dares to guarantee the clearing risk? Speaking of 19% annualized return sounds great, but the question is, is this thing stable? Hmm... a 70% collateralization ratio is still a bit exciting, a sharp correction could be really risky. Lending cost is only 1%? When will this rate come down? Feels like walking a tightrope; a slight shake in the coin price could be the end.
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DaoDevelopervip
· 01-07 13:28
the arbitrage spread here is pretty neat, but lemme ask—who's actually sustaining that 20% yield? the composability breaks down real quick once you dig into the tokenomics
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