Even during the depths of the 2022–2023 “crypto winter” (aka the crash and brutal public shaming of the broader cryptocurrency market as a whole) the growing demand for liquid staking services has nonetheless proven to remain red hot.
According to DeFiLlama, the total value locked (TVL) in DeFi liquid staking stood at a healthy $7.7 billion at the start of 2023. Even more impressive, this number continued to climb to over $33 billion by January 2024, and it nearly doubled to $59 billion by March.
Following this dramatic climb, cryptocurrency publications like CoinDesk went on record claiming that liquid staking is “the biggest category in decentralized finance (DeFi).”
Liquid restaking enhances the concept of liquid staking by allowing users to stake their cryptocurrencies to support a network and earn rewards, while also receiving a liquid derivative token that represents their staked assets. Unlike basic liquid staking, where the focus is primarily on earning staking rewards with the added benefit of liquidity, liquid restaking further capitalizes on this liquidity by enabling these derivative tokens to be actively used in various DeFi applications, traded, or utilized as collateral, thus offering greater flexibility and utility within the crypto ecosystem.
Although proof-of-stake (PoS) chains like Ethereum (ETH) hog the limelight in the liquid restaking revolution, don’t count bitcoin (BTC) out. In fact, liquid restaking might be the catalyst the king cryptocurrency needs to achieve its full glory.
In this article, you’ll discover how liquid restaking is already redefining what traders and investors think of bitcoin’s possibilities.
How Could Liquid Restaking Shake Up The Bitcoin Blockchain? — The Psychological Impact
First, consider some revealing statistics: 45% of bitcoin hasn’t moved in three years according to analysts, and 11% hasn’t moved between five to seven years. Considering bitcoin’s current mainstream identity as “digital gold” and a “hedge against inflation” — plus bitcoin’s long-standing, meme-friendly “HODL” culture — it’s no surprise that so many bitcoin investors put this cryptocurrency into their no-touch portfolio.
While this narrative is a major reason behind bitcoin’s worldwide attraction, it creates a sense of illiquidity as most market participants hope to desperately cling to their coins, as they fully expect bitcoin’s price to experience massive appreciation in just the coming decade or two, much less even longer ($1 billion in 2038, according to Fidelity Investments). In turn, this creates a psychological barrier to the hodler from using or selling bitcoin for other investments or transactions.
The primary benefit liquid restaking brings to bitcoin’s ecosystem is that liquid restaking provides a way to give Bitcoiners the “best of both worlds.” Liquid stakers still maintain ownership rights over their satoshis when they send them to a liquid staking provider. However, instead of merely locking away their bitcoin in an interest-bearing vault, the liquid staking derivatives (LSDs) from these protocols let traders restake their synthetic bitcoin for potentially higher yields in multiple other DeFi opportunities now competing for every bitcoin hodler’s liquidity.
With this new technological and psychological paradigm, traders have more of an incentive to use the unmatched stability of bitcoin as their basis for exploring the possibilities of DeFi, thus improving liquidity and giving bitcoin yet another new value proposition: the bitcoin network can now potentially serve as the superior bedrock layer for all the world’s DeFi activity.
Examining ETH’s Liquid Staking Evolution — Clues To BTC’s Liquid Staking Trajectory?
As much as bitcoin maximalists want to see bitcoin as the core of the DeFi infrastructure, Ethereum is currently the leader in this category, having a distinct first-mover advantage in DeFi. As the first smart contract blockchain and an innovator in the broader cryptocurrency ecosystem, Ethereum has always played a pivotal role in DeFi’s evolution. However, with the introduction of liquid staking and restaking, using ether as the standard for DeFi activity has only become more dominant. The increased adoption of ETH due to liquid staking provides a clue into how this new model could positively impact the bitcoin economy.
For evidence of liquid staking’s impact on DeFi liquidity, consider that the TVL in ETH liquid staking sat at $11.2 billion in March of 2023 and ballooned to over $50 billion in March of 2024.
Lido Finance remains the leader for ETH staking services, with the market cap for its staked ether derivative (stETH) rising from $4.11 billion in January 2023 to over $21 billion one year later.
More DeFi lending and borrowing protocols, including MakerDAO and Aave, now integrate with hot liquid staking tokens like stETH, further increasing its popularity and usability in the DeFi ecosystem.
As impressive as these growth figures are, financial analysts believe the flexibility and demand for LSDs will contribute to an ever-increasing positive cycle for ether liquidity. Given the opportunities and conveniences LSDs offer investors — and the increased accessibility throughout DeFi applications — firms such as HashKey Capital project the liquid staking market to 2x by 2025.
Led by liquid staking products like Lido’s stETH, LSDs have the potential to bring Ethereum’s total staked ETH to a $1 trillion market cap, dramatically increasing the Beacon Chain’s security and securing ETH’s dominance as the most trusted and active asset in DeFi.
How Liquid Restaking Unlocks The Bitcoin Economy
It is clear that Ethereum’s liquid staking protocols positively impact network activity and adoption, but how do these numbers translate to bitcoin’s situation? After all, bitcoin operates on the proof-of-work (PoW) consensus model rather than Ethereum’s proof-of-stake Beacon Chain. Why would LSDs of bitcoin supercharge bitcoin’s liquidity throughout the cryptocurrency-related ecosystem?
To address this question, let’s take a step back and review the basic reasons LSDs are such a powerful liquidity enhancer. Researchers Stefan Scharnowski and Hossein Jahanshahloo at Cardiff University identified two key ways LSDs achieve their positive impacts in the cryptocurrency markets. The first benefit of LSDs is their flexibility throughout DeFi, which includes their usability in yield-bearing opportunities and their transferability on cryptocurrency exchanges. Along with this ease of use within DeFi, Scharnowski and Jahanshahloo note the lack of lock-up periods on many liquid staking protocols as a significant feature influencing trader psychology and overall liquidity (or lack thereof, more specifically).
Just because bitcoin’s core consensus model uses PoW doesn’t mean it can’t take advantage of the benefits of LSDs, both in terms of DeFi usage and transferability. The durability of the PoW model — in addition to bitcoin’s longevity, size, and decentralization in the cryptocurrency space — all provide a unique value proposition as a liquid staking token versus other cryptocurrency assets.
Traders using BTC-derived LSDs have the guarantee of the bitcoin blockchain’s security backing up each of their tokens, providing an unparalleled level of trust for DeFi derivative assets.
While bitcoin’s base layer provides extreme trust and reliability for LSDs, the tokenization process also promises to help bitcoin branch out without forfeiting PoW consensus. By tokenizing staked bitcoin, developers have greater flexibility to make bitcoin an interoperable, multi-chain asset while preserving the core mining infrastructure. Bitcoin-derived LSDs unlock the potential to earn and use one’s bitcoin both within its native DeFi ecosystem as well as across other major chains, including Ethereum and Solana (SOL) by offering standards like ERC-20 or SPL for bitcoin-staked tokens. The intersection of these positive features opens the door to make bitcoin the most trusted and liquid token in DeFi, greatly enhancing bitcoin’s flexibility to become the true native currency of the internet, while respecting its now-traditional role as “digital gold” amongst traditional savers. However, generally speaking, more use cases (i.e., utility) generally means more potential value, so bitcoin hodlers and even “bitcoin maxis’’ do have much to gain from embracing bitcoin liquidity on other layers, if also maintaining that the security promise of base-layer bitcoin can truly be met.
What Does The Future Of Restaking Hold For Bitcoin?
While the prospects of using bitcoin in liquid staking and restaking are immense, it’s important to remember just how fresh this field is. Even on blockchains like Ethereum, liquid staking is one of the newest innovations, and there are still many questions about how staking as a service will evolve, and what bitcoin’s potential place in the coming ecosystem will become.
However, as more Layer 2 projects build on top of bitcoin’s foundation — and as adoption for LSDs continues to skyrocket — it’s crystal clear that liquid staking and restaking will be crucial in the future of bitcoin’s worldwide adoption. As staking products become more widely accessible, bitcoin just might reach unprecedented liquidity in the ensuing years.