Research
Putting Bitcoin to Work: The Case for Bitcoin-Native Yield Infrastructure
June 3, 2026

Institutional exposure to Bitcoin has grown significantly over the past two years. Bitcoin spot ETFs attracted substantial inflows following their approval. Corporate treasury allocations became more common. Family offices and asset managers added BTC as a reserve position.

The asset is held. The question is what happens next.

Bitcoin does not generate yield by itself. It sits. For institutions accustomed to deploying capital productively (earning coupon on bonds, receiving dividends on equity, collecting carry on alternatives), holding a non-yielding asset at scale is a question that requires an answer.

The first wave of answers came from outside Bitcoin's native infrastructure. Those answers introduced a new set of risks.

The Wrapper Problem

Most Bitcoin yield products currently in operation work by wrapping BTC onto another chain.

The mechanics are straightforward in description and complex in execution. A user deposits Bitcoin. A custodian holds the native BTC. A wrapped token representing that Bitcoin is issued on Ethereum or another smart contract chain. That wrapped token is then deployed into yield strategies: lending markets, liquidity pools, restaking protocols.

The yield is real. The risk transfer is also real.

Wrapped BTC is only as secure as the bridge and custodian standing between the native asset and its on-chain representation. In January 2026, Solv Protocol, a Bitcoin yield platform, reported a $2.7 million exploit involving a minting flaw in one of its Bitcoin Reserve Offering vaults. In May 2026, Solv migrated $700 million in tokenized Bitcoin assets away from its existing bridge infrastructure citing cross-chain security concerns. The underlying concern, that bridge infrastructure was inadequate for the exposure being carried, was stated explicitly.

This is not a criticism of any single platform. It is a structural observation about the model. When native Bitcoin is wrapped onto another chain, its security properties are diluted by the infrastructure standing between the asset and its representation. For institutional allocators with fiduciary obligations, that dilution is a material risk factor.

What Bitcoin-Native Yield Infrastructure Looks Like

Bitcoin-native yield infrastructure keeps assets on Bitcoin rails throughout their lifecycle. There is no wrapping onto another chain. There is no bridge that can be exploited to drain the underlying exposure.

The practical requirement is that yield-generating activities are conducted within infrastructure that settles on Bitcoin. This is more constrained than deploying on Ethereum, where smart contract composability enables complex strategy stacking. It is also structurally cleaner from a risk perspective.

On Bitcoin-native rails, the settlement anchor is Bitcoin's Proof-of-Work chain. Assets are issued and distributed on the Mintlayer network, while the underlying collateral never leaves the Bitcoin chain. The result is that the collateral position inherits Bitcoin's settlement finality without being exposed to the security model of a third-party chain or the reliability of a bridge operator.

What a Regulated Structure on Bitcoin Rails Looks Like

The most defensible model for institutional Bitcoin yield combines Bitcoin-native settlement infrastructure with regulated fund structures.

In this model, the underlying assets generating yield are regulated instruments, including government bonds, private credit, and real estate, held in compliant custody structures. Ownership records and settlement are managed on Bitcoin-native infrastructure. The fund operates under regulatory oversight.

This separates the yield question from the custody question. Bitcoin holdings remain in their existing custody arrangement. Yield is generated by regulated assets, not by deploying BTC into protocols with variable and sometimes opaque risk profiles.

I1: An Example of the Model in Practice

I1 is Mintlayer's Bitcoin-native yield product, structured as a fund of funds providing exposure to regulated, income-producing real-world assets, including real estate, private credit, and other yield-bearing instruments, with settlement on Mintlayer's Bitcoin-native infrastructure.

The structure is designed so that BTC holders can access yield from regulated assets without wrapping their Bitcoin or moving it to a third-party chain. The yield is generated by the underlying assets in the fund, not by the infrastructure risk being taken on.

For institutions evaluating Bitcoin yield infrastructure, the structural question is whether yield is generated by the underlying assets or by the infrastructure risk being assumed. In a Bitcoin-native, regulated-fund model, the answer is the former.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Learn more about I1 and how Mintlayer is building Bitcoin-native yield infrastructure. Learn more →

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