From reinsurance to structured credit: The financial products you didn’t know Bitcoin was powering

Everyone knows about the ETFs, but almost nobody knows about the dozens of obscure institutional products being built around Bitcoin while the funds soak up all the attention, from a $40 million insurance reserve in Barbados to an S&P-rated bond deal sold to Wall Street investors by Jefferies.

The ETFs answered only one question, which was how ordinary investors and institutions could own Bitcoin inside a regulated wrapper. The products in this article answer a different, and arguably bigger one: what can you actually do with Bitcoin once you own it?

The answer is: the same things finance has always done with US Treasuries and gold. You can pledge it to borrow money, post it as margin for trades, hold it as the reserve behind an insurance policy, or build a corporate balance sheet on top of it.

Assets that can do all of that at once are sometimes called financial primitives, which is a fancy way of saying building blocks: things so widely accepted and easy to value that the rest of the financial system stacks loans, bonds, and derivatives on top of them. Treasuries earned that status because everyone agrees on what they’re worth and how to seize them if a deal goes wrong.

Bitcoin is now being tested for the same job, and the early results explain why some of the biggest players in this market really, truly don’t care if the price goes up or down.

Insurance reserves, consumer credit, and the very first rated Bitcoin bond

In March 2025, Tabit Insurance, a Barbados-licensed carrier founded by former executives of the Bittrex exchange, capitalized a $40 million property and casualty insurance facility funded entirely in Bitcoin.

Essentially, people who hold Bitcoin hand it over to back real insurance policies that cover storm damage and lawsuits against company directors, and in exchange, earn a dollar yield that runs near 10%. The policies and premiums stay in US dollars, so customers never touch crypto, while Bitcoin sits in reserve as the money that pays claims if things go wrong.

Tabit holds a Class 2 license from the Barbados Financial Services Commission and is set up as a segregated cell company, meaning each investor pool is legally walled off from the others, so one cell’s losses can’t drain another’s capital.

Regulators and auditors can also check reserves on the blockchain in real time, providing more transparency than traditional insurers offer in their quarterly filings. CEO Stephen Stonberg said that the entire global reinsurance industry runs on roughly $800 billion of capital, while Bitcoin is an asset class worth trillions, so even a sliver of that wealth flowing into underwriting would be felt across the industry.

While insurance reserves are certainly a pretty unexpected use case for Bitcoin, lending is where the money starts to get serious. A Bitcoin-backed loan works the way it sounds: you pledge your coins to a lender, you receive dollars, and you get the coins back when you repay.

Holders do this because selling would trigger a taxable gain and end their exposure to future price increases, while borrowing against the coins gives them cash without giving up either.

Volumes across platforms reached roughly $2 billion in 2025, and Toronto-based Ledn alone reports more than $9.5 billion in originations since 2018, with JPMorgan and other major banks now rolling out similar offerings to their own clients.

In February 2026, that lending business crossed into the mainstream bond market. Ledn closed a $188 million securitization, which means it bundled 5,441 of its loans into a pool and sold bonds whose interest payments come from the borrowers’ repayments.

The bonds were sliced into two layers: $160 million of senior notes that get paid first, which S&P Global rated BBB-, an investment-grade stamp and the first ever given to a security backed by digital assets, and $28 million of riskier junior notes rated B- that absorb the first losses in exchange for a higher yield.

The numbers underneath were pretty conservative by crypto standards. The 2,914 US borrowers in the pool owed $199.1 million but had posted roughly 4,079 BTC worth $356.9 million, which works out to a loan-to-value ratio of 55.8%, meaning they pledged almost $2 of Bitcoin for every $1 they borrowed.

They paid a weighted-average interest rate of 11.8% on loans that come due in a single lump sum within a year. Investors demanded about 3.35 percentage points of extra yield over comparable conventional bonds to hold BTC as collateral, and even at that price, the deal was more than twice oversubscribed.

Ledn CEO Adam Reeds said the structure created a “direct pipeline between Bitcoin holders seeking liquidity and the world’s deepest pools of institutional capital,” while Bitwise’s European research head Andre Dragosch said the deal was evidence that traditional finance now treats Bitcoin as legitimate, even pristine, collateral.

The structure was stress-tested almost immediately, revealing both the strength and the fragility of the entire model. Bitcoin fell roughly 27% from mid-January into February 2026, which pushed loan-to-value ratios up across the pool and triggered margin calls, the automated demands that borrowers either add collateral or watch the lender sell it.

Ledn ended up liquidating about a quarter of the loans originally slated for the deal. The sale still closed, partly because those automatic liquidations did exactly what they were designed to do, and Ledn had never taken a loss when selling collateral for a breach.

The consequence to keep in mind runs the other way: when many lenders run the same triggers on the same volatile asset, a sharp price drop forces them all to sell at once, and that selling pushes the price down further, triggering more selling. The system passed its first real test, and it also revealed where it would break under enough pressure.

Collateral networks, carry trades, and corporate balance sheets

Underneath these products, the basic machinery of the market is being rebuilt to look more like the markets for currencies and bonds, where the company holding your assets, the platform where you trade, and the system that settles the trade are three separate things.

Anchorage Digital, which operates the only federally chartered crypto bank in the US, launched its Atlas settlement network in April 2024 so institutions could settle trades directly with each other without parking money in escrow or pre-funding accounts at an exchange.

By March 2026, Atlas had connected nearly 600 participants, four times as many as a year earlier, had processed tens of billions of dollars in settlements, and had expanded into managing collateral, meaning the bank now monitors loan positions, issues margin calls, and handles liquidations on behalf of lenders.

Cantor Fitzgerald picked Anchorage and Copper.co to play that role for its global Bitcoin financing business in March 2025, and Copper’s ClearLoop system lets trading companies keep their coins locked at the custodian while still trading on multiple exchanges, so a repeat of the FTX collapse couldn’t take client assets down with it.

All of this allows posting Bitcoin as margin to become as routine and as safe as posting Treasuries, which is the precondition for everything else mentioned we’ve mentioned in this article to scale.

Plenty of the institutional money flowing through that machinery has no opinion on Bitcoin at all. The basis trade, one of the most popular institutional strategies since the ETFs launched, exploits the fact that Bitcoin futures usually trade slightly above the spot price: a fund buys spot Bitcoin or ETF shares, simultaneously sells futures contracts at the higher price, and pockets the gap no matter what the price does next, since the gain on one leg offsets the loss on the other.

After the ETFs gave funds an easy way to hold the spot side, hedge funds built record short positions in CME futures, and open interest there climbed from roughly 30,000 contracts in early 2024 to a peak near 45,000 that November.

The trade grew large enough that its unwinding now moves the market on its own, with CME open interest falling below $10 billion in April 2026 as those paired positions closed and the mechanical selling weighed on prices regardless of anyone’s mood.

CME keeps building for this crowd, adding 24/7 trading in May 2026 and launching Bitcoin Volatility Index futures in June, which let institutions bet on or hedge against how wildly the price swings rather than where it goes.

Corporate treasuries have pushed the idea furthest of all. Strategy held 843,738 BTC as of late May 2026. The company issued $6.7 billion in convertible notes, which are bonds that can turn into shares if the stock rises, plus $15.5 billion in preferred stock across five different instruments, securities that pay fixed dividends and sit between debt and common shares in the pecking order, to finance their insane BTC purchases.

It raised $25.3 billion in 2025 alone, making it the largest US equity issuer that year, accounting for roughly 8% of all issuance, and it markets the preferred securities as “Digital Credit,” an entire fixed-income product line whose dividends are ultimately serviced by a Bitcoin balance sheet.

Shareholders effectively get leveraged Bitcoin exposure through a stock; dividend investors get double-digit yields backed by the coins, and imitators from Tokyo-listed Metaplanet to Semler Scientific have copied Michael Saylor’s risky playbook.

Private banks run a parallel assembly line for wealthy clients, packaging structured notes that cap the downside of Bitcoin exposure in exchange for giving up some upside, allowing conservative portfolios to hold an asset that would otherwise be too volatile for them.

If you want to… The product that does it
Earn a dollar yield on idle coins Bitcoin-funded insurance reserves (Tabit)
Borrow dollars without selling BTC BTC-backed loans (Ledn, JPMorgan)
Buy Bitcoin-linked yield without touching BTC Rated securitizations (Ledn Issuer Trust 2026-1)
Post collateral without exchange risk Prime financing and custody networks (Cantor, Anchorage, Copper)
Capture spreads regardless of price Basis trades (CME futures)
Raise capital against a BTC balance sheet Convertible notes and preferred stock (Strategy)
Hold BTC with a capped downside Structured notes (private banks)
Settle trades like FX, around the clock Settlement networks (Anchorage Atlas)

Which brings the paradox that opened this piece full circle.

The ETFs answered how institutions could own Bitcoin, and the products described here answer what owning it is for. An asset that simultaneously capitalizes Caribbean reinsurers, backs investment-grade bonds, margins CME derivatives, and services preferred dividends has moved well past speculative adoption into the working machinery of finance.

Historians of this market may eventually treat the ETF as the visible first layer of institutionalization, while the durable change occurred in the financing and settlement systems, where Bitcoin came to do the job Treasuries and gold have done for generations: serving as the collateral everything else gets built on.

The risks are real, as February’s liquidation cascade demonstrated, and they’ll grow with the leverage. The direction, though, looks settled, and Bitcoin’s most consequential institutional role may never show up in a fund flow chart, because it’s becoming part of the machine itself.

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