Looking again at how Bedrock routes uniBTC across its four vault layers, the thing that stood out wasn't the yield. It was that the strategies don't each hold their own Bitcoin. They draw from one productive base.

It's like a power grid. The plants generating electricity don't each keep a private reserve of fuel for the houses they serve. Power flows from a shared source into different circuits based on where demand is. The circuits are separate. The source is one.

Most DeFi yield systems don't work this way. Each strategy custodies its own capital, which means the same "diversification" is really fragmentation — the same dollar represented four different ways across four isolated pools, each with its own accounting.

Bedrock keeps uniBTC as a single productive base first, then routes it into Delta-Neutral, DeFi-Native, Lending, and RWA strategies as circuits drawing from that base. The Bitcoin has one definition. The strategies are just where it's currently doing work.

That distinction matters more than it looks. When capital is fragmented across isolated pools, no one can answer a simple question cleanly: how much is actually deployed, and where, at this exact moment? When it flows from a unified base, that question always has one answer.

Composability stops being about connecting more protocols. It becomes about keeping one asset consistent while it works in many places.

The vaults are the circuits. uniBTC is the grid.#bedrock $BR $LAB @Bedrock