What Are Liquid Principal Tokens (LPTs)?

Read this blog in Russian, Indonesian, Vietnamese, 中文, हिंदी, Türkçe, and ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ.

Cryptocurrency holders and investors have been able to stake their digital assets to participate in consensus and governance on proof-of-stake blockchains for roughly a decade; however, there have recently been some notable new capabilities introduced into the staking process.

For example, Babylon has enabled bitcoin to be used as collateral for alternative proof-of-stake (PoS) networks, and the same crypto asset can be used to provide security to multiple different networks at the same time.

Perhaps the most important innovation over the past few years has been the ability to access the liquidity associated with a particular stake via liquid principal tokens (LPTs). Through this process, users can simultaneously stake their cryptocurrency assets while also using derivatives, based on that stake, in various decentralized finance (DeFi) applications.

What Is Liquid Staking?

Liquid staking enhances traditional staking by providing users with access to the liquidity of their staked assets. In a typical PoS blockchain, participants lock up their funds to secure the network, rendering their tokens unavailable until they’re unstaked. However, liquid staking allows users to stake their coins while maintaining access to that value for use in other blockchain applications such as lending, payments, trading, yield-bearing DeFi applications, and more.

Additionally, this concept can be extended to liquid restaking, which allows the same cryptocurrency assets to be staked on multiple networks simultaneously.

Notably, there are key differences in how liquid staking works on Bitcoin and Ethereum. Liquid staking on Ethereum through the EigenLayer smart contract allows users to stake ETH natively, due to the expressive nature of the cryptocurrency network’s scripting language. Conversely, Bitcoin’s Babylon protocol uses a combination of native scripting and off-chain cryptographic techniques to enable staking in an ad-hoc manner, requiring additional protocols like Lorenzo for full liquid restaking functionality.

What Are Liquid Staking Tokens (LSTs)?

Liquid staking tokens (LSTs) represent staked cryptocurrency on PoS blockchains. They enable users to maintain the liquidity of their assets while earning rewards by participating in staking. If the base collateral is involved in multiple staking protocols, then the assets are more properly defined as liquid restaking tokens (LRTs). Even though the original assets are staked and supporting network operations, the corresponding LSTs or LRTs can still be used elsewhere, even on completely separate cryptocurrency networks by way of secure bridging mechanisms.

When users stake their cryptocurrency, they can receive LSTs that represent the value of their staked assets. Whoever holds the LSTs is who has the rights to withdraw the staked cryptocurrency from the underlying staking protocol. These tokens allow users to maximize their investments without forfeiting the benefits of staking. In other words, they’re able to gain yield from multiple different sources using the same underlying collateral.

How Liquid Principal Tokens Are Created Using Lorenzo Protocol

When a user decides to stake their bitcoin via Lorenzo Protocol, they will send their bitcoin on the bitcoin blockchain to a specific multisig address. Once this transaction has been confirmed by Lorenzo, the user can receive the principal of their staking deposit in the form of LPTs on the Lorenzo appchain. From here, the LPTs can be used in decentralized applications directly on the Lorenzo appchain or bridged to other networks.

The Lorenzo’s native LPT is stBTC. Notably, the yield awarded on the stake the stBTC tokens derive their value from is not attached to these tokens. Instead, the staked bitcoin and the rights to the rewards associated with that stake are separated into two separate tokens on Lorenzo appchain. The tokens associated with the staking rewards are known as yield-accruing tokens (YATs), and only the holder of those tokens can access the staking yield.

Benefits Of Liquid Principal Tokens For Bitcoin

Through the creation of LPTs in Lorenzo Protocol, new features and technical capabilities can be enabled for bitcoin. Any of the alternative cryptocurrencies can now be implemented as Bitcoin Layer 2 networks, with the staked bitcoin both providing security for the network and enabling a secure two-way pegging mechanism between bitcoin on the base bitcoin blockchain and the new secondary layer.

Whether a user wants to bring the expressiveness of Ethereum or privacy of Monero to their bitcoin usage, Lorenzo Protocol can enable any use case. By bringing every cryptocurrency use case to bitcoin, the overall utility of the cryptocurrency, and thus the market overall, increases due to the increased scale and liquidity of the bitcoin economy.

More fromLorenzo academy

December 10, 2024
Bitcoin - Core Concepts

What Is Bitcoin Mining?

Bitcoin mining is the engine driving the world’s largest decentralized financial network. But how does it work, and why does it matter? This article dives into the intricate process of mining, detailing how miners validate transactions, secure the blockchain, and introduce new bitcoin into circulation. From the evolution of mining hardware to its environmental controversies, we explore the pivotal role mining plays in Bitcoin’s ecosystem and its implications for the future of global finance.

December 7, 2024
Bitcoin - DeFi

Bitcoin & The Move Ecosystem: An Overview Of Key Players And Implications

Dive into the groundbreaking convergence of the Move ecosystem and Bitcoin DeFi.

December 6, 2024
Bitcoin - Core Concepts

Who Owns The Most Bitcoin? View The Biggest Whales

An overview of the world's top Bitcoin holders, spanning individuals, companies, and countries.