Canadian startup Ledn, which offers bitcoin-backed fiat loans, now also offers dollar-pegged DAI loans, connecting bitcoin users with ethereumâs decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystem.
Ledn co-founder Mauricio Di Bartolomeo, a Venezuelan expat, told CoinDesk this new partnership with stablecoin promoter MakerDAO was driven by customer demand.
Out of âthousandsâ of users, more than half of Lednâs users are in Latin America, Di Bartolomeo said, where ethereum-backed DAI is increasingly seen as an alternative to strictly regulated dollar transfers. In fact, this past weekend the central bank of Argentina restricted civilians to buying only $200 in USD per month, down from the previous $10,000.
âIn Argentina, if you receive a bank transference in USD they convert it immediately to ARS (Argentinian Nuevo peso), and you lose money,â Nadia Alvarez, MakerDAOâs head of business development in Latin America, told CoinDesk. âWe know BTC hodlers donât want to sell their BTC, but they need liquidity, for their daily expenses. That is why we think this is relevant for Latin America.â
Ledn isnât the first company to notice that bitcoiners are eager for access to the ethereum communityâs experimental loan products. Silicon Valley startups in the Cross-Chain Working Group are also working on a different solution to allow wrapped bitcoin tokens directly on the ethereum blockchain.
Plus, later this month Maker token holders, who govern the stablecoin ecosystem, will vote on whether to include bitcoin among the upcoming multi-collateral version of DAI. (Currently, DAI tokens are only made by locking up ether tokens in smart contracts that monitor ether prices and automatically liquidate the ether collateral if the price plummets.)
In the meantime, Ledn will buy ethereum-backed DAI from over-the-counter traders and manage bitcoin custody for loan clients. Di Bartolomeo said clients across Latin American have reported banking issues comparable to Argentina, although unique for each context, which is why they are turning to DAI. He added Colombians make up 16 percent of Lednâs user base, the largest demographic in Latin America, followed by Venezuelans at 12 percent.
âSeveral users have expressed that they would like to use stablecoins like DAI to purchase additional digital assets and others to access more financial services,â he said.
Ledn users will soon be able to lock up their bitcoin and spend DAI at 750 merchants across Colombia, Venezuela, Argentina and Brazil, according to MakerDAOâs Alvarez.
Separate from the loan startup, MakerDAO is partnering with product-provider Pundi X, and planning to install point-of-sale devices across Latin America so that DAI users can spend crypto directly on goods and services. In addition, brick-and-mortar locations will enable a user in Argentina to send fiat or DAI to Venezuela, for example, with Pundi Xâs debit cardâesque Xcard.
âThe [Ledn] DAI loan gives bitcoiners the opportunity to enter into the DeFi world, and all the projects inside the ecosystem,â Alvarez said.
Di Bartolomeo told CoinDesk heâs excited to work with MakerDAO precisely because they have âboots on the groundâ where his customer base lives. Dozens of people have attended DAI meetups in Mexico City, Bogota and Buenos Aires over the past year. Globally, MakerDAO records currently show more than 60,000 DAI wallet addresses in October 2019.
âWhile we donât yet explicitly hear from our users that they are spending DAI for their day-to-day expenses like they do with dollars,â Di Bartolomeo said, âwe expect stablecoin adoption to increase in the region because they solve important problems for users.â
Disclosure: CoinDesk contributor Diana Aguilar is Lednâs digital content director. She was not involved in the production of this story.
Team photo via Ledn. Pictured (left to right): Anton Livaja, Adam Reeds, Mina Botrous, David Gamez, Carlos Ng, Mauricio Di Bartolomeo