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Coinbase (COIN) announced Thursday that users can now use their Ethereum (ETH) holdings as collateral to borrow Circle’s (CRCL) stablecoin, USD Coin (USDC).

The platform already supports Bitcoin (BTC)-backed loans, which now allow borrowing up to $5 million in USDC. Ethereum-backed loans are capped at $1 million. The service is available to U.S. customers, excluding New York, with plans to expand to additional assets and countries.
COIN’s stock edged 0.7% lower in morning trade, even though the broader market was recovering from a week of volatile trading. On Stocktwits, retail sentiment around the crypto exchange remained in ‘neutral’ territory with chatter at ‘high’ levels.
The loans are powered by Morpho and run on Base, which also powers Coinbase’s Bitcoin-backed loans. Base by Coinbase is a secure, low-cost, developer-friendly Ethereum Layer 2 (L2) blockchain network.
Last month, Coinbase surpassed $1 billion in Bitcoin-backed on-chain loan originations, just eight months after launching the service in January. "Next goal: $100B in onchain borrow originations," Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong posted on X at the time. "These adoption charts are what every product manager wants to see: hockey stick growth. The onchain economy is thriving."
Coinbase is positioning crypto-backed lending as an alternative for users to access liquidity without selling assets.
The overall cryptocurrency market capitalization edged up 0.3% over the last 24 hours to $3.15 trillion. Ethereum’s price fell 1.2% in the last 24 hours, leading losses among the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market cap. On Stocktwits, retail sentiment around the altcoin trended in ‘bearish’ territory, accompanied by ‘high’ levels of chatter over the past day.
Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s price edged 0.5% lower in the last 24 hours. Retail sentiment around the apex cryptocurrency was also in ‘bearish’ territory with ‘high’ levels of chatter.
Earlier this week, USDT (USDT) stablecoin issuer Tether made an investment in Ledn, signaling its entry into the crypto-backed lending market. Major banks are also moving in the same direction. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) has plans to let clients use Bitcoin and Ethereum as collateral, with the product targeted for launch by year-end.
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