When you first open the Bedrock vault interface, you see four options—Delta Neutral, Pure Yield, Credit Loan, RWA—each followed by a string of numbers. Annualized yield, maximum historical drawdown, Sharpe ratio, strategy capital capacity. To be honest, while I can recognize these numbers individually, I’m at a loss on how to compare them all together. You stare at the screen for two minutes and might just go with your gut to pick one.
This scenario is probably familiar to you. Most protocols in DeFi throw data at you and then tell you "DYOR"—do your own research. But they never consider how an average user might not have the time or ability to fully dig into it.
What Bedrock's BRClaw does is actually quite straightforward: it translates the publicly available market-making records, drawdown data, and yield distributions from the Selini chain into plain English for you. The yield from this vault comes from market-making spreads, not from betting on directions, so it won't crash when the market takes a nosedive. The biggest risk of this vault? It’s when the market suddenly loses volatility, spreads tighten, and yields drop, but you won’t lose your principal.
These analyses aren't just made up by BRClaw. Its underlying data comes entirely from on-chain public records—every market-making spread, every arbitrage operation, every cross-layer price hunt on Selini is etched on the chain. AI simply translates this data, turning "Sharpe ratio 1.8" into "this strategy has been profitable 70% of the time over the past six months, and when it does lose, it typically loses just a little."
Interestingly, BRClaw doesn’t have a "recommend" button. It only provides analysis, not decisions for you. Which vault to choose, ultimately, you have to confirm yourself. The best AI investment advisor doesn’t press the confirm button for you; it empowers you to feel confident enough to hit that confirm button yourself. @Bedrock #bedrock $BR
This scenario is probably familiar to you. Most protocols in DeFi throw data at you and then tell you "DYOR"—do your own research. But they never consider how an average user might not have the time or ability to fully dig into it.
What Bedrock's BRClaw does is actually quite straightforward: it translates the publicly available market-making records, drawdown data, and yield distributions from the Selini chain into plain English for you. The yield from this vault comes from market-making spreads, not from betting on directions, so it won't crash when the market takes a nosedive. The biggest risk of this vault? It’s when the market suddenly loses volatility, spreads tighten, and yields drop, but you won’t lose your principal.
These analyses aren't just made up by BRClaw. Its underlying data comes entirely from on-chain public records—every market-making spread, every arbitrage operation, every cross-layer price hunt on Selini is etched on the chain. AI simply translates this data, turning "Sharpe ratio 1.8" into "this strategy has been profitable 70% of the time over the past six months, and when it does lose, it typically loses just a little."
Interestingly, BRClaw doesn’t have a "recommend" button. It only provides analysis, not decisions for you. Which vault to choose, ultimately, you have to confirm yourself. The best AI investment advisor doesn’t press the confirm button for you; it empowers you to feel confident enough to hit that confirm button yourself. @Bedrock #bedrock $BR