Unsecured Stablecoin Lending Fantasies

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USDC0,02%

Author: Haonan

Article compiled by: Block Unicorn

Introduction

The global unsecured consumer credit market users are like fat sheep of modern finance—slow to act, lacking judgment, and lacking mathematical ability.

When unsecured consumer credit shifts to the stablecoin track, its operational mechanism will change, and new participants will have the opportunity to share the pie.

Market Size

In the United States, the primary form of unsecured lending is credit cards: this ubiquitous, highly liquid, and instant credit tool allows consumers to borrow without providing collateral during shopping. Unpaid credit card debt continues to grow, currently reaching approximately $1.21 trillion.

Outdated Technology

The last major transformation in the credit card lending field occurred in the 1990s when Capital One introduced risk-based pricing, a breakthrough that reshaped consumer credit. Since then, despite the emergence of new banks and fintech companies, the structure of the credit card industry has remained largely unchanged.

However, the emergence of stablecoins and on-chain credit protocols has provided a new foundation: programmable currency, transparent markets, and real-time funds. They are expected to ultimately break this cycle, redefining how credit is generated, financed, and repaid in a digital, borderless economy.

  • In today’s card payment systems, there is a time gap between approval (transaction approval) and settlement (the card issuer transferring funds to the merchant via the card network). By moving the funds processing to the blockchain, these receivables can be tokenized and financed in real time.
  • Imagine a consumer purchasing a $5,000 item. The transaction is immediately approved. Before settlement with Visa or Mastercard, the card issuer tokenizes the receivables on-chain and receives $5,000 USDC from a decentralized credit pool. After settlement, the issuer sends these funds to the merchant.
  • Later, when the borrower repays, the repayment amount is automatically returned to the on-chain lender via smart contracts. Similarly, the entire process is conducted in real time.

This approach enables real-time liquidity, transparent funding sources, and automatic repayments, reducing counterparty risk and eliminating many manual processes still present in today’s consumer credit.

From Securitization to Funding Pools

For decades, the consumer credit market has relied on deposits and securitization to enable large-scale lending. Banks and credit card issuers bundle thousands of receivables into asset-backed securities (ABS) and sell them to institutional investors. This structure provides ample liquidity but also introduces complexity and opacity.

Lending platforms like Affirm and Afterpay have demonstrated the evolution of credit approval processes. They no longer offer universal credit limits but instead review each transaction at the point of sale, differentiating between a $10,000 sofa and a $200 pair of sneakers.

  • This transaction-level risk control produces standardized, divisible receivables, each with clear borrower, term, and risk profile, making them ideal for real-time matching through on-chain lending pools.
  • On-chain lending can further expand this concept by creating dedicated credit pools around specific borrower groups or purchase categories. For example, one credit pool could fund small transactions for high-quality borrowers, while another could serve subprime consumers with travel installment plans.
  • Over time, these funding pools could evolve into targeted credit markets, enabling dynamic pricing and providing transparent performance metrics for all participants.

This programmability opens the door to more capital-efficient allocation, better interest rates for consumers, and the creation of an open, transparent, and instantly auditable global unsecured consumer credit market.

Emerging On-Chain Credit Stack

Reimagining unsecured lending for the on-chain era is not just about transplanting credit products onto blockchain but fundamentally rebuilding the entire credit infrastructure. Beyond issuers and processors, the traditional lending ecosystem relies on a complex network of intermediaries:

  • We need new credit scoring methods. Traditional credit scoring systems, such as FICO and VantageScore, could be adapted for blockchain, but decentralized identification and reputation systems might play a larger role.
  • Lending institutions will also require credibility assessments, akin to ratings by S&P, Moody’s, or Fitch, to evaluate approval quality and repayment performance.
  • Finally, the less conspicuous but crucial aspects of debt collection also need improvement. Debt denominated in stablecoins still requires enforcement mechanisms and recovery processes, combining on-chain automation with off-chain legal frameworks.

Stablecoin cards have bridged the gap between fiat and on-chain consumer spending. Lending protocols and tokenized money market funds are redefining savings and returns. Introducing unsecured credit onto the chain completes this triangle, enabling seamless borrowing and lending for consumers, transparent funding for investors, all driven by open financial infrastructure.

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