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Crypto Lending Vs Crypto Staking – What’s The Difference And Why Does It Matter?

At first glance, crypto staking and crypto lending seem like basically the same thing. You lock up your crypto on a platform and earn yield. In this article, we compare the crypto two products and highlight a range of differences in terms of their risk profiles, returns and viability.

What Is Crypto Lending?

Cryptocurrency lending is a financial service that allows crypto holders to lend popular cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and stablecoins to borrowers in exchange for interest or ‘yield’.

Typically, lenders don’t interact with borrowers directly, instead, they provide their funds to centralized online platforms like Youhodler and Nexo, or Defi protocols like CREAM or AVE which, in turn, lend these assets out to individual and institutional borrowers. The interest rates paid to lenders vary depending on the current market demand for the tokens being lent and their overall liquidity. Stablecoins such as Tether and USDC usually provide the highest interest rates.

In simple terms, the ‘process’ being applied is the same as that seen in traditional banking for hundreds of years. Lenders send their funds to a bank for a conservative return. The bank then uses those funds to issue loans at a higher interest rate to borrowers. They, in turn, pay back the loans and the bank keeps a percentage and pays modest interest to its lenders. 

What Is Crypto Staking?

Crypto staking refers to the process of holding and "staking" a particular cryptocurrency in a digital wallet to support the operations of a blockchain network. In return for staking their coins, participants can earn additional cryptocurrency as a reward. 

Staking differs to crypto lending in that the staked crypto is not lent out to borrowers. In a proof-of-stake blockchain, new blocks are not mined like in a proof-of-work (PoW) system (e.g., Bitcoin and Litecoin). Instead, the process of block creation and validation is carried out by validators who are chosen to create new blocks based on the number of coins they have staked and other factors, such as their reputation or random selection algorithms. Bitcoin and other proof-of-work coins cannot be staked.