Astaria, a decentralized finance project co-founded by ConsenSys and SushiSwap alum Joseph DeLong, has raised $8 million in a round that included True Ventures, Arrington Capital, Wintermute, and many others.
The platform will allow holders of valuable non-fungible tokens to lock them up as collateral and borrow crypto against those NFTs, so they can buy other NFTs, plus trade and invest in decentralized finance (DeFi). For borrowers, liquidity is instant, and liquidations more predictable.
Why it matters:
Driving the news: Amid a brutal downturn in all things crypto-related, a lot of the air has been let out of the NFT market. But Astaria's fundraising success suggests the obituary for the sector may have been prematurely written.
There's still a lot of wealth trapped in non-fungible tokens: Volume is down considerably in the NFT market, but it's definitely not gone, Bram said.
There are a lot of normal people who might benefit as well. "A lot of these people who hold apes are NFT rich and cash poor, and we want to fix that," DeLong said, referring to the Bored Apes Yacht Club, the most valuable single collection of NFTs in the world right now).
Situational awareness: Decentralized finance and NFTs have been dancing around each other since at least 2020, and Astaria is not the only company to enter the NFT lending space, but it believes it can advance the product significantly for users.
Astaria uses an appraisal system, where a knowledge worker writes a term sheet about an NFT that reflects its particular characteristics. The appraiser decides how much can be lent against the NFT, the length of the loan, the interest rate and can even craft some special terms.
Astaria has also crafted special functions so that borrowers can still "use" their NFTs somewhat, if something special comes up (such as accessing a party or unlocking a gift to holders).
Be smart: Price discovery in NFTs is very tricky. All Bored Apes are not the same (not even close), for example.
Reality check: It's a complete bear market in crypto and future growth is looking dicey at best. So, it might seem like a crazy time to build a company around lending against JPEGs.