Most conversations about Bitcoin yield start from the wrong place: how much can I earn, and how fast can it compound.
What Lorenzo made me realize is that yield itself is not the product—it’s a side effect of infrastructure finally being designed correctly.
Instead of chasing returns, the protocol focuses on creating a Financial Abstraction Layer where yield strategies become standardized, composable, and legible to both users and institutions.
Through On-Chain Traded Funds, Lorenzo separates strategy logic from capital ownership, allowing Bitcoin liquidity to participate without constantly being reconfigured or manually optimized.
This distinction matters because it removes the emotional layer from yield decisions; capital flows based on structure, not impulse.
As someone who has watched many BTC-DeFi attempts fail under complexity, the simplicity of Lorenzo’s abstraction feels less like innovation and more like maturity.
Eventually, Bitcoin doesn’t become productive because it is forced to—but because the environment around it finally knows how to handle it.


