
Most Bitcoin holders own one of the most valuable assets in the world. And I do absolutely nothing with it. This is starting to change with Mezo.
Mezo, a Bitcoin native lending protocol, has just announced a strategic partnership with Aerodrome Finance. If you’re not familiar with Aerodrome, here’s what you need to know. It is the largest decentralized exchange on the Coinbase core network and has been the liquidity backbone of this ecosystem for some time now. We’re talking about a platform that has pushed its own TVL past $1 billion.
So why does a Bitcoin lending protocol need a Base DEX? Let’s break it down.
The setup
Mezo has partnered with Aerodrome to make it the primary liquidity hub for the MEZO token and MUSD, a Bitcoin-backed stablecoin. The deal has a specific financial hook. Mezo will allocate 2.25% of its total MEZO token supply to veAERO voters over a 30-day period, with the aim of initiating deep, decentralized liquidity for both tokens.
Here’s why it’s important. Aerodrome uses a voting-escrow model in which users lock up tokens to earn voting power and rewards, helping to direct liquidity and incentives in a way that supports long-term stability. These are not retail traders looking for quick turnarounds. Aerodrome’s veAERO voting base includes protocols, high-net-worth traders, and institutions such as Coinbase Ventures and Animoca Brands. They are experienced capital allocators who understand how to generate sustainable returns.
Mezo now wants them in Bitcoin’s corner.
The mechanics of performance
Think about it this way. Aerodrome has developed a playbook for directing liquidity through governance incentives. Mezo imports this exact model into Bitcoin Loans.
Mezo’s “Airfield for Bitcoin Loans” design channels borrower interest on MUSD loans, origination fees, and DEX swap fees into yield for BTC lockers, which currently earn around 4% APR. This yield comes from real protocol activity. No inflation. No printing of tokens.
This distinction is more important than most people think.
The vision of Bitcoin banking
Now let’s talk about what Mezo is actually trying to build. Because the Aerodrome partnership is only one element of a much larger idea.
Mezo founder Matt Luongo discusses a 2010 article by Hal Finney, who imagined “Bitcoin banks” that would issue their own currencies with different reserve policies, allowing users to transact while remaining confident that their holdings were backed by BTC. This vision remained dormant for 15 years. Mezo tries to make this real.
You’re basically describing Hal Finney’s description/prediction about Bitcoin banks, where George is quoted: pic.twitter.com/uNjaFBAI7p
— Alex Gladstein 🌋 ⚡ (@gladstein) January 24, 2025
The basic product is simple. You deposit Bitcoin, open a line of credit, and your interest rate remains fixed for the life of the loan. No banks. No applications. And no credit check. The current rate is 1% APR. As a reminder, centralized Bitcoin lenders have historically charged 9-12% for the same privilege.
Vaults are the on-chain savings accounts
It’s in the chests that it gets interesting. Mezo just launched BTC vault and stablecoin strategies, with BTC vault targeting 2-5% APR and stablecoin vault targeting 5-10% APR. BTC vault accepts tBTC, WBTC and cbBTC. The stablecoin vault accepts USDC, USDT, and MUSD. Both are live now. These are organized, institutional-quality strategies, not yield farming gimmicks.
A community member documented the loop in action: he deposited $8,500 in BTC, borrowed $1,800 MUSD, and used some of it to cover real expenses like groceries. Their Bitcoin never moved. They just spent against it.
This is what living off Bitcoin without selling it really looks like.
Mezo’s roadmap expresses ambition directly: a homeowner in Austin using BTC as mortgage collateral at a fixed rate, a South American business owner financing operations without touching the local currency, daily transactions executed on credit lines backed by Bitcoin instead of debt. It is a model for a circular Bitcoin economy.
The institutional side is also part of the plan. Nearly 59% of BTC has not moved in over a year, in part because the terms desired by institutional borrowers, who want to maintain custody while borrowing at scale, are mutually incompatible in today’s market. Mezo is building the infrastructure to change this, with collateral held separately and credits issued without Bitcoin leaving qualified custody.
Where is Mezo right now?
This is not a draft white paper. Mezo’s TVL stands at nearly $76.3 million, with a lifetime MUSD volume of approximately $500 million, over 2,000 loans issued at a fixed 1% APR, and over 43,500 mainnet users.
Momentum began to build with Mezo’s “Bring Bitcoin Home” campaign, which migrated approximately $23 million in tBTC, cbBTC, WBTC, and USDT from Ethereum pre-deposit vaults to Mezo’s mainnet. This proved the concept. The Aerodrome partnership is the next step in scaling it up.
On the infrastructure side, the protocol does not save money. Mezo is backed by $28.5 million in seed funding, led by Pantera Capital with participation from Paradigm, a16z and Polychain. Security audits were carried out by Quantstamp and Thesis Defense, with validators operated by P2P and Chorus One.
Overview
Here’s what I think it actually means.
Bitcoin DeFi has had a perception problem. The criticism has always been that Bitcoin sits on the sidelines while Ethereum and its L2s take care of all the financial activity. This story is crumbling. Bitcoin-based DeFi activity has picked up since 2024, with a growing number of platforms aiming to bring lending, borrowing, and yield strategies to the network.
Mezo is not trying to outperform Ethereum. It’s about borrowing the mechanisms that already work and applying them to Bitcoin. It’s a smarter play than starting from scratch.
The question now is whether BTC holders will actually show up. The performance is real. The infrastructure is audited. Credit lines are active. And for long-time holders who have spent years looking at their idle stack, it’s hard to argue with this argument.
Why sell when you can borrow?

The information discussed by Altcoin Buzz does not constitute financial advice. This is for educational, entertainment and informational purposes only. Any information or strategy consists of thoughts and opinions relevant to the author/reviewer’s accepted levels of risk tolerance and their risk tolerance may be different from yours. We are not responsible for any losses you may incur as a result of any investment directly or indirectly related to the information provided. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are high-risk investments, so please do your due diligence. This article is sponsored by Market Across
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