๐Ÿค‘ Borrowing against your bitcoin? From today's issue of FIRE BTC, here are my abbreviated thoughts on leveraging your BTC stack ๐Ÿ‘‡

When pursuing FIRE, we spend years stacking assets like stocks and bitcoin to reach a savings portfolio goal to sustain our ongoing expenses. Once obtained, the standard and most simple way to live off your portfolio is to sell these assets slowly, at about 4% per year (the 4% rule).

Is there another option? Maybe.

An exciting and interesting idea is to borrow against your bitcoin instead.

Borrowing against the assets you own to buy more assets enables you to take advantage of unavoidable dollar debasement.

Doing so allows you to access dollars now, while delaying the sale until the end of the loan term.

The hope is that bitcoinโ€™s value continues its relentless march higher, above and beyond the rate of fees and interest needed to service the loan.

A few thoughts and best practices:

๐Ÿ”ธ Before taking on any debt, make sure you have a plan for the interest payments. This could be from other income sources, selling a small portion of the bitcoin, or paying interest from the loan proceeds.

๐Ÿ”ธ Just as important as paying the interest is being able to maintain the margin requirements for the loan. You donโ€™t want to be a forced seller at a low price, so itโ€™s imperative that you have a plan to maintain the collateral position of the loan during price drawdowns.

๐Ÿ”ธ Look for fiat financing first. The fiat world is built on debt, and there are plenty of other options available for loans that will likely have better terms than a bitcoin-backed alternative.

๐Ÿ”ธ Be conservative. Consider borrowing against your bitcoin only after its value is large enough where you only need to leverage a small portion of your overall stack to meet your needs.

๐Ÿ”ธ Understand your counterparty risk. Borrowing against your bitcoin means giving up full control over it. Whether from malicious intent or mismanagement-turned-bankruptcy, many people have been burned because they did not understand the counterparty risk they were exposed to.

๐Ÿ”ธ The banks are (probably) coming. When the banking industry comes to play, they will bring massive amounts of capital for lending against bitcoin, which should drive down rates and make loan terms more competitive.

Iโ€™m an advocate for leveraging the fiat financial system to get wealthier more quickly. I believe bitcoin will usher in a world less reliant on debt. Until then, we might as well embrace it.

Want to read the full post? You can find it here ๐Ÿ‘‡

https://firebtc.substack.com/p/borrowing-against-your-bitcoin

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Discussion

I can't wait to give this a read.

I've also advocated using fiat leverage to secure more sats, and am working on an article laying out my credit leverage journey and the lessons I've learned along the way.

Really interested to see what parallels I might find in your article. Adding to the reading list.

Fire Bitcoin is ๐Ÿ”ฅ

> Borrowing against your bitcoin means giving up full control over it.

That's not always the case.

It depends on the platform you are using.

As an example, Firefish.io locks the Bitcoin collateral in an escrow that is still controlled by the borrower.

Details here: https://docs.firefish.io/firefish-protocol

(Disclosure: I work for Firefish.io)

If you have full control, how can this also be true?

Your Bitcoin can only be spent in specific ways according to already partially signed transactions.

If the price oracle triggers the missing signature then the bitcoin is liquidate. Exactly as you agreed when you agreed to the take the loan.

It doesn't mean anyone else can move everywhere else your bitcoins.

Cool thanks for the explanation

I concur with this and sum it up by saying it this way, "it is coming but we are not there yet".

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Good advice!