Why Crypto Holders Are Looking Beyond the Sell Button
You have Bitcoin. Maybe Ethereum. Perhaps a broader portfolio of digital assets you have held for years. The value has grown and now you need cash for a real estate purchase or a business opportunity or simply to rebalance your finances.
Selling seems like the obvious move. But selling triggers a taxable event. Depending on your cost basis and how long you have held those assets, the capital gains tax bill could eat into a meaningful chunk of your proceeds.
Digital asset lending offers another path. You borrow against your crypto holdings and access liquidity while keeping your market exposure intact. Under current federal tax laws, this type of borrowing typically does not trigger a taxable event at loan origination. That is one of the primary reasons investors consider this strategy in the first place.
But here is where things get real. This approach involves risks that demand serious evaluation. Collateral volatility can trigger margin calls. Platforms can fail. Regulatory treatment continues to evolve. None of this is set and forget territory.
How Crypto Backed Loans Actually Work
The mechanics are straightforward on the surface. You deposit cryptocurrency as collateral with a lending platform. The platform extends a loan in cash or stablecoins based on the value of your deposit. You pay interest on the loan and when you repay the principal, you get your collateral back.
Two primary models exist in this space.
Centralized platforms operate more like traditional lenders. They custody your assets and manage the loan terms directly. These platforms offer familiar structures and customer support but they also concentrate risk with a single entity. The collapse of several high-profile crypto lenders in recent years demonstrated what happens when that single entity fails.
Decentralized protocols use smart contracts to automate lending. Interest rates fluctuate based on supply and demand within liquidity pools. You maintain more direct control over your assets but you also face smart contract vulnerabilities and governance risks that do not exist in centralized models.
Neither model is inherently safer. The right choice depends on your loan size and duration and your comfort level with different types of risk.
Understanding Loan to Value Ratios and Liquidation Risk
Most crypto lending platforms allow you to borrow up to 50 percent of your collateral value. That sounds reasonable until you remember how volatile these assets can be. Bitcoin has historically experienced significant price swings over short periods. At high loan to value ratios, a sharp market correction could trigger a margin call or force the platform to liquidate your collateral automatically.
Neither outcome is pleasant.
Conservative borrowers often target LTV ratios well below the maximum to build in a buffer against volatility. The exact ratio depends on your risk tolerance, the specific assets you are pledging, and how quickly you can move additional collateral if needed.
In extreme market conditions, your collateral could be liquidated entirely. This means you could lose your entire position and still owe money depending on how the liquidation unfolds. That is not a theoretical risk. It has happened to real investors during market downturns.
Platform Risk: Evaluating Where You Put Your Assets
Before committing assets to any platform you need to evaluate several factors.
- Custody arrangements: Does the platform hold assets on chain or through a centralized custodian or via institutional-grade storage? Each model has different risk profiles.
- Regulatory status and jurisdiction: Is the platform subject to oversight from recognized bodies? In which jurisdictions does it operate? Regulatory ambiguity remains a feature of this space, not a bug.
- Track record: Has the platform experienced defaults, withdrawal freezes, or operational issues? How were those situations resolved? Look at history across multiple years, not just recent performance.
- Liquidation policies: What happens if your LTV ratio breaches the threshold? How much time do you have to add collateral? What fees apply?
Decentralized protocols present their own set of risks, including flash loan attacks and governance vulnerabilities. Centralized platforms offer more familiar structures but concentrate risk with a single entity. Spreading collateral across multiple platforms can limit counterparty exposure but adds operational complexity.
Tax Considerations: Why Structure Matters
Borrowing against crypto generally does not trigger a taxable event at the time of loan origination under current federal tax laws. But investors should be aware of potential changes in tax legislation and state or local tax implications. This is not advice. This is a reminder to talk to your tax advisor.
Here is where things can get complicated.
If your collateral gets liquidated due to a margin call, that liquidation is a taxable sale. The IRS treats it the same as if you had sold those assets voluntarily. Your cost basis, holding period, and the price at liquidation all factor into the calculation.
Interest payments on crypto-backed loans may also have tax implications, depending on how the loan is structured and what you use the funds for. Coordinating with a qualified tax advisor before entering any crypto-backed loan arrangement is not optional. They can review your unrealized gains and evaluate how the loan interacts with other portfolio transactions and help you structure the arrangement to support your broader tax planning goals.
How Digital Asset Lending Compares to Traditional Credit
Before taking out a crypto-backed loan, compare the terms against other available credit sources.
Portfolio margin loans or securities-backed lines of credit may offer lower interest rates with less volatility risk. They also carry risks such as potential margin calls or liquidation of assets if the value of your collateral decreases.
Home equity lines of credit provide another alternative, though they require different collateral and have approval processes, and come with the risk of foreclosure if payments are not made.
And sometimes, selling a portion of your holdings and paying the capital gains tax simply makes more financial sense than paying ongoing interest on a loan. The math varies depending on your tax bracket, the loan terms available, and your outlook on the underlying assets.
Running the numbers across multiple scenarios, including potential returns, risks, tax implications, and loan costs, helps you make an informed decision rather than defaulting to whichever option sounds most appealing on the surface.
Fitting Crypto Lending Into Your Broader Financial Plan
Digital asset lending may work best when part of a coordinated strategy rather than a standalone decision.
You need to consider how a crypto-backed loan interacts with your existing credit lines, mortgage obligations, business debt, and cash reserves. Taking on additional leverage without understanding your total exposure can create problems during market stress. A loan that seemed manageable at origination can become burdensome if your crypto collateral drops in value while your other assets are also under pressure.
This is why coordination matters.
At Digital Wealth Partners, we review digital asset lending opportunities within the context of your full balance sheet, tax situation, and risk tolerance. The goal is not to maximize borrowing capacity but to identify whether and when crypto lending makes sense for your specific circumstances. While integrating crypto lending into your financial plan can offer benefits, it also introduces risks like increased exposure during market downturns.
Security and Custody Best Practices
How your collateral is secured matters as much as the loan terms themselves.
Look for platforms that use multi-signature custody arrangements, hardware security modules, and geographically distributed signers. These controls reduce the risk of a single point of failure compromising your assets.
Some investors prefer to work with platforms that offer insurance coverage for custodied assets. Others maintain a portion of their holdings in self-custody using hardware wallets for assets not pledged as collateral.
Operational controls matter too. Access management, audit trails, and regular security testing all contribute to platform resilience. None of this eliminates risk, but it helps you understand what you are working with.
The Regulatory Picture
Regulatory uncertainty remains a defining feature of digital asset lending.
In the United States, the SEC and FINRA continue to focus on fraud prevention, disclosure requirements, and investor protections in the crypto space. The IRS has increased enforcement around cryptocurrency disclosures, and new reporting requirements, including Form 1099-DA, are expanding transaction reporting obligations.
Decentralized protocols face particular ambiguity. Pilot regulatory programs exist in jurisdictions like Singapore and Abu Dhabi, but clear global frameworks have not emerged.
International investors face additional complexity navigating diverse regulatory regimes across jurisdictions. What is permissible in one country may not be in another. This is an area where ongoing monitoring and professional guidance matter.
Planning Your Next Move
If you hold digital assets and need liquidity, selling is not your only option.
Crypto-backed loans can provide access to capital while preserving your market exposure and deferring potential tax consequences. But they also involve risks, including collateral volatility, counterparty default, platform insolvency, and liquidity constraints, which must be carefully considered.
The decision requires detailed analysis of platform risk, including the possibility of platform failure or security breaches, liquidation thresholds, tax treatment, and how the loan fits within your broader financial picture.
Digital Wealth Partners works with clients to evaluate these factors and structure lending arrangements aligned with their goals. Our advisors collaborate with your tax and legal professionals to ensure the approach makes sense across your full financial plan.
Ready to discuss whether digital asset lending belongs in your strategy? Contact Digital Wealth Partners to start the conversation.
Disclosure
Digital Wealth Partners LLC is a Registered Investment Advisor. Digital asset lending involves risks including collateral volatility, counterparty default, platform insolvency, and liquidity constraints. Platform risk includes the risk of platform failure, security breaches, or changes in platform policies, which could affect your loan or collateral. Borrowing against crypto may not be suitable for all investors. Tax outcomes depend on individual circumstances and should be reviewed with a qualified tax professional. Digital Wealth Partners may receive referral compensation from certain lending partners. This compensation is disclosed prior to engagement and does not influence our advice.
DISCLAIMER