DeFi Protocol Ondo Finance Sets Up Tokenized Corporate Bonds With Over 8% Yield on Stablecoins

Decentralized finance (DeFi) platform Ondo Finance has launched three products that will allow stablecoin holders globally to invest directly in bonds and U.S. Treasuries.

Ondo estimated the regulated products could attract more than $100 billion in stablecoins, which currently may not be earning yields for their holders.

On Ondo’s site, the OUSG fund invests in short-term government treasuries, earning 4.2% per annum; the OSTB invests in short-term bonds, earning 5.45% per annum; and OYHG invests in high-yield corporate bonds, paying out 8% per annum to depositors. Fees for these funds are currently listed at 0.15%.

The funds deposited on Ondo will further be invested in relevant exchange-traded funds offered by BlackRock and PIMCO. Coinbase Custody will custody any stablecoins the fund holds, while Coinbase Prime will handle conversions between stablecoins and fiat.

The so-termed “blue chip” DeFi protocols such as Compound and Aave yield about 1-2% per year by investing in liquidity pools belonging to projects based on blockchains like Ethereum or Solana.

Newer uncollateralized lending protocols, on the other hand, offer yields in the 7-10% APR range, but these loans have been “experiencing higher-than-expected default rates” and are proving to be less transparent and riskier than many traditional bonds with comparable yields, according to Ondo.

“Large stablecoin holders, including start-ups and DAOs, are faced with a choice between having their purchasing power eroded away by inflation or taking too much risk with the current set of on-chain yield offerings," Nathan Allman, founder of Ondo Finance, said in a post.

The funds will process daily subscriptions and redemptions in stablecoins as well as traditional fiat, and investors will receive tokens on the Ethereum blockchain representing their ownership.

Over the past few years, crypto protocols such as Terra and several others advertised yields of over 20% that attracted billions in dollars from crypto hopefuls. These products eventually imploded as the model was unsustainable and often depended on printing tokens “rewards” from thin air that had no intrinsic value.