A loan where bitcoin is the collateral and nobody can margin call you when price pukes 20 percent in an afternoon. That’s the pitch.
On July 7, 2026, Strike started offering what it calls volatility‑proof bitcoin‑backed term loans, designed to survive price swings without forced selloffs of your BTC mid‑term The Block. It’s a bold claim in a market where liquidation emails show up faster than price alerts.

The question isn’t just whether the product works mechanically. It’s whether bitcoin credit, structured like this, can actually coexist with the asset’s volatility without breaking something downstream.
Crypto lending has always had a core tension: lenders want to protect principal, borrowers want stability and time. Price‑triggered loan‑to‑value checks solved the lender’s fear but crushed borrowers at the worst moment. If BTC falls quickly, you either top up collateral or you’re liquidated into the dip. Everyone’s seen that movie.
Strike is trying a different cut: keep the loan current, and the collateral won’t be touched until the end of term. No LTV alarms, no cascading liquidations mid‑panic. It’s versioning bitcoin credit for borrowers who value certainty over the cheapest possible rate.
This matters for miners looking to smooth cash flows, long‑term holders who don’t want to sell coins to cover a tax bill, and small businesses that want BTC as a treasury asset but still need fiat liquidity. It also matters for lenders and markets that have grown used to algorithmic liquidation keeping losses short and sharp.
Strike’s design is simple enough on paper, with a few important knobs.
According to Strike’s own FAQ, the product eliminates all price‑triggered LTV actions. That means no warnings, no margin calls, no automatic partial liquidations while you’re on schedule with payments. The collateral stays untouched through the term. If you miss an interest payment or the maturity payoff, you get a 10‑day grace period to cure before any partial liquidation happens Strike (official FAQ).
There are trade‑offs. The maximum initial LTV is lower at 45 percent versus 50 percent for Strike’s standard loan. The term is shorter at 6 months instead of 12. And the interest rate is higher: Strike lists a base APR range of 7.49 to 11.25 percent for its standard loans, with a 2.95 percentage point premium for the volatility‑proof product Strike (official FAQ). Independent coverage pegs the effective APR at roughly 10.7 to 14.2 percent, offered as a term loan in select U.S. states for now KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing).
Strike launched the product on July 7, 2026, and early coverage suggests it’s not a line of credit; it’s a defined‑term loan, regionally limited in the U.S. at launch The Block, KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing).
The point of comparison matters. Most centralized crypto lenders and DeFi borrowing protocols manage risk with live LTV triggers. Strike is moving that checkpoint to time and payment behavior rather than price.
Feature Strike volatility‑proof Strike standard DeFi CDP / typical CeFi loan Mid‑term liquidation No price‑based liquidations while current Yes, price‑triggered Yes, price‑triggered Initial LTV Up to 45% Up to 50% Varies; often 30%–70% depending on asset/venue Term 6 months 12 months CDPs are open‑ended; CeFi varies Rate Base + 2.95% APR premium 7.49%–11.25% APR (base) Varies widely by market/liquidity Grace period 10 days after missed payment Not typical Usually none for automated liquidations Availability Select U.S. states Varies Global access depends on venue
You’re swapping price‑path risk for calendar risk. Instead of watching candles and juggling collateral top‑ups, you lock in a schedule and a balloon payment at maturity. You pay more for that certainty and you post more collateral upfront.
Lenders accept deeper drawdowns without auto‑selling collateral. They protect themselves with conservative LTVs, shorter terms, and a fatter spread. The real work shifts to underwriting: income sources, intentions for proceeds, and realistic exit plans at month six.
There’s also geography. The volatility‑proof loan is being rolled out in select U.S. states only, which limits how many borrowers can use it out of the gate KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing).
Let’s walk through a simple path. Say you borrow at the 45 percent LTV cap for a 6‑month term.
If BTC rebounds before maturity, you’ve effectively ridden out the storm and paid a premium for the privilege. If BTC falls and stays low into maturity, you’ve delayed — not eliminated — the need to sell some coins. That can feel like kicking the can, but for many borrowers, timing matters as much as price.
By waiving dynamic LTV protections, the lender concentrates risk at maturity dates. Conservative LTVs and a 6‑month clock are their first line of defense. They can also manage risk with internal hedging or capital buffers, though those mechanics aren’t spelled out in product materials.
In classic crypto loans, drawdowns trigger forced sales and realized losses immediately, often cascading into markets. In this model, losses (if any) realize at maturity failures, not during intraday chaos. That’s kinder to borrowers and arguably kinder to market microstructure during panics.
With price triggers gone, the lender must believe you can pay. That can mean tighter KYC, income verification, conservative loan sizes, and more human judgment. It’s closer to traditional secured lending than to on‑chain CDPs that talk to an oracle and push a button.
The 2.95 percentage point premium on top of Strike’s standard APR is the fee for certainty Strike (official FAQ). Independent coverage puts the out‑the‑door APR around 10.7 to 14.2 percent depending on the base rate and borrower profile KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing). That’s not cheap money. But for borrowers repeatedly wrecked by margin calls, the calculus may still favor predictability.
Consumer and small‑business lending in the U.S. is a patchwork of state rules. Strike is rolling this out in select states, which implies compliance work is ongoing and not uniform. If you’re outside the eligible states, the product may simply be unavailable for now KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing).
With any custodial BTC‑backed loan, practical questions matter: where is the collateral held, what are the controls, and can it be rehypothecated? The volatility‑proof feature addresses liquidation mechanics, not custody specifics. Borrowers should read custodial terms closely and understand counterparty risk.
Borrowing against BTC can defer a taxable sale event in some jurisdictions, but interest is an expense and collateral liquidation at maturity could still create a disposition. Rules vary; keep records and get professional advice where needed.
If you want a steady stream of updates and measured takes as products like this evolve, Crypto Daily covers both the on‑chain data and the fine print from issuers and regulators. You can keep tabs on product rollouts and lender behavior here: Crypto Daily.
Strike’s volatility‑proof loans remove price‑triggered LTV checks entirely during the term. If you keep payments current, the collateral stays untouched. Only if you miss interest or fail to repay at maturity does a 10‑day grace period start, after which the lender can liquidate enough collateral to cover what’s owed Strike (official FAQ).
Strike lists a base APR of 7.49 to 11.25 percent for standard loans. The volatility‑proof option adds a 2.95 percentage point premium on top. Coverage translates this to roughly 10.7 to 14.2 percent APR in practice, depending on the borrower and base rate Strike (official FAQ), KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing).
The volatility‑proof loan caps initial LTV at 45 percent and uses a 6‑month term. By contrast, Strike’s standard loan lists up to 50 percent LTV and a 12‑month term Strike (official FAQ).
No. Reporting indicates it’s available as a term loan in select U.S. states at launch. Coverage also notes that a revolving line of credit isn’t part of this specific offering KuCoin (reporting CryptoBriefing).
Borrowers who value certainty over the lowest rate: miners, long‑term holders with a defined cash need, and businesses aligning cash inflows with a 6‑month maturity. It’s less suitable for traders seeking flexible leverage or anyone without a clear repayment plan.
Nothing happens mid‑term if your payments are current. There are no margin calls and no partial liquidations during the term. If you can’t repay at maturity and don’t cure within 10 days, the lender can sell enough collateral to settle the obligation, returning any excess BTC to you afterward Strike (official FAQ).
Early repayment terms depend on the lender’s contract. Generally, paying off sooner reduces total interest accrued, but check Strike’s specific loan agreement for any prepayment policies or fees.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


