The goal isn’t to generate yield on Bitcoin. The goal is to make
$BTC useful. Bedrock is building the infrastructure to make that happen
Bedrock doesn’t create yield for Bitcoin.
Bedrock creates utility for Bitcoin.
Today, most Bitcoin remains idle in wallets or custodial platforms. Despite being the largest asset in crypto, Bitcoin has yet to play a meaningful role in the on-chain economy.
This is the problem Bedrock is solving.
Instead of focusing on creating new assets, Bedrock focuses on increasing the efficiency of the capital that already exists.
Through uniBTC, Bedrock creates a liquidity layer for Bitcoin. BTC is connected to infrastructures such as Babylon, Kernel, Pell, and SatLayer, allowing it to participate in staking, restaking, and network security while users continue to hold a liquid asset that can still be deployed across DeFi.
This creates a fundamental shift.
Bitcoin is no longer just an asset that is held.
Bitcoin becomes an asset that is used.
Bedrock does not generate yield by itself. It builds the infrastructure that enables Bitcoin to participate in a wide range of economic activities across blockchain networks. Yield becomes a byproduct of Bitcoin creating value rather than simply storing value.
This is also why Liquid Restaking is not Bedrock’s end goal.
It is merely the mechanism that allows Bitcoin to contribute to network security while maintaining liquidity and composability across DeFi.
From a broader perspective, Bedrock is betting on a much larger trend:
The next phase of crypto growth will not come from creating more capital, but from making existing capital more productive.
And there is no pool of capital larger than Bitcoin.
If successful, Bedrock will be more than just a BTCFi protocol.
It will become the infrastructure layer that helps transform Bitcoin from a Store of Value into a Productive Asset for the on-chain economy.
#bedrock @Bedrock $BR