Argentinians have never had much trust in the banking system, dating back to the 2001 financial crisis—deposits were frozen, and savings were wiped out. Since then, many people have simply hidden cash in US dollars at home. According to the International Monetary Fund, Argentinians hold at least $271 billion in undeclared cash. Against this backdrop, a new solution has emerged.
As one of Argentina's largest crypto exchanges, Lemon recently launched a special Visa credit card—supporting Bitcoin collateralization. How does it work? It's simple: you lock in 0.01 Bitcoin (roughly $950 at current prices), and you can get an initial credit limit of 1 million Argentine pesos. The key point is, your Bitcoin doesn't need to be sold; it just stays there as collateral.
This idea is quite interesting. Bitcoin is frozen as collateral rather than being sold or exchanged for fiat currency. Users can access fiat credit limits without losing ownership of their crypto assets, allowing them to continue benefiting from potential Bitcoin price increases.
Lemon's ambitions go beyond this. The company plans to iterate on this product, enabling users to flexibly adjust collateral amounts and credit limits. Ultimately, they also want to support direct settlement of USD-denominated expenses using stablecoins like USDC or USDT. In other words, your credit card bill could be settled directly with stablecoins.
This reflects an interesting phenomenon: in places where trust in traditional financial systems is low, crypto products find a real foothold. Argentine users, facing peso devaluation, are turning their attention to USD and Bitcoin—while exchanges seize the opportunity to connect crypto assets with everyday spending through innovative financial products.
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OldLeekNewSickle
· 01-19 01:59
Honestly, this is just a scheme where capital pools are disguised as financial innovation.
Lemon's card design is clever, but the underlying logic is just helping exchanges lock in liquidity.
The key question no one is asking: Will Bitcoin used as collateral be forcibly liquidated? What is the liquidation threshold?
Argentina's $271 billion in cash is indeed an opportunity, but don't treat Lemon as a savior.
Collateralizing 0.01 Bitcoin for 1 million pesos—why is this credit limit so high? I smell a scam.
Stablecoin settlement sounds impressive, but in reality, it's still locking user asset pools. That's the typical exchange rhetoric.
When borrowers need to raise funds, these innovative products are the best stories. There are definitely hidden fees in the credit card segment.
Don't be fooled by the phrase "no need to sell Bitcoin." In fact, your coins have already been frozen. Once liquidity is gone, it's the same as gone.
Why is no one discussing the sustainability of this loan loss ratio? In the long run, the risk is extremely high.
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LiquidityNinja
· 01-17 22:57
Argentinians are really playing this wave perfectly; the crypto world should take notes
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Can Bitcoin be used as collateral and still held to increase gains? This is the right way to do it
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Finally, an exchange has understood the real pain point, not just cutting the leeks
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$271 billion hidden under the mattress... That number is incredible; no wonder they’re eager to find an exit
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Using stablecoins to settle credit card bills—this logic is pretty ruthless
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The worse traditional finance gets, the more opportunities there are in crypto. That’s right
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0.01 Bitcoin can leverage a 1 million Peso limit? Looks like the leverage game is on point
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The Peso has depreciated to this extent; using crypto as an alternative makes sense now
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If Lemon’s combo punch really works, other trading profits should follow suit
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The key is that the coins are still in your hands—that’s the product design I want
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AirdropHunterZhang
· 01-16 02:57
This is the real application scenario, not just armchair theorizing. Argentinians have learned their lesson the hard way and are now smart enough to go all-in with Bitcoin as collateral, settling with USD stablecoins. I love this combination. It's much more reliable than projects that boast about the Web3 revolution but can't actually use anything. Honestly, for a coin to last long, it still needs to have practical use.
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CoinBasedThinking
· 01-16 02:57
Argentina's move this time is brilliant; using Bitcoin as collateral is much more reliable than keeping money in the bank.
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BlockchainRetirementHome
· 01-16 02:54
This is the real solution to the problem, much more reliable than those empty talk projects.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 01-16 02:40
Wow, this is the real use case, not just theoretical discussions on paper.
Argentinians have never had much trust in the banking system, dating back to the 2001 financial crisis—deposits were frozen, and savings were wiped out. Since then, many people have simply hidden cash in US dollars at home. According to the International Monetary Fund, Argentinians hold at least $271 billion in undeclared cash. Against this backdrop, a new solution has emerged.
As one of Argentina's largest crypto exchanges, Lemon recently launched a special Visa credit card—supporting Bitcoin collateralization. How does it work? It's simple: you lock in 0.01 Bitcoin (roughly $950 at current prices), and you can get an initial credit limit of 1 million Argentine pesos. The key point is, your Bitcoin doesn't need to be sold; it just stays there as collateral.
This idea is quite interesting. Bitcoin is frozen as collateral rather than being sold or exchanged for fiat currency. Users can access fiat credit limits without losing ownership of their crypto assets, allowing them to continue benefiting from potential Bitcoin price increases.
Lemon's ambitions go beyond this. The company plans to iterate on this product, enabling users to flexibly adjust collateral amounts and credit limits. Ultimately, they also want to support direct settlement of USD-denominated expenses using stablecoins like USDC or USDT. In other words, your credit card bill could be settled directly with stablecoins.
This reflects an interesting phenomenon: in places where trust in traditional financial systems is low, crypto products find a real foothold. Argentine users, facing peso devaluation, are turning their attention to USD and Bitcoin—while exchanges seize the opportunity to connect crypto assets with everyday spending through innovative financial products.