VERIFIED COMPANY SuperEx_Media ✔️ Posted November 19 VERIFIED COMPANY Report Posted November 19 #NFT-Fi #NFT When people see today’s topic, their first reaction is often “profile pictures,” “artworks,” “limited collectibles,” “monkey pictures,” and so on. At the same time, a lot of questions will come up: “Isn’t an NFT already a kind of financial asset?” Maybe you, reading this article now, just bought someone’s NFT on XXX today. As you watch the price of that NFT fluctuate, you feel a strong financial attribute in it. But do you really understand NFTs? In the beginning, they did not come with financial attributes — they came with artistic attributes. What you’ve been seeing in terms of price going up and down is more about the value fluctuation of the artwork itself, rather than financial value. What we are talking about today as “financial assets” is more about understanding questions like: How can NFTs be used as collateral? How can NFTs be used to borrow and lend? How can NFTs be fractionalized? How can NFTs provide liquidity? How can NFTs be priced? How can NFTs become yield-bearing assets? In other words, when NFTs fully shift from being a “cultural product” to a “financial product,” we need to understand this trend, because it is rapidly becoming a mainstream narrative. This is exactly today’s topic: NFT-Fi (NFT Financialization) — how NFTs are gradually evolving from collectibles into “financial assets” that can be traded, borrowed against, and used for derivatives. To help you grasp the entire framework in one read, this article will go from underlying logic to mechanism principles, from market demand to future trends, and explain everything in one go. Let’s start with what NFT-Fi actually is The financialization of NFTs is essentially a transformation: assets that originally only had “uniqueness” gain price discovery, financial attributes, and capital efficiency through protocols, models, and liquidity design. In other words: NFTs that could originally only be bought and sold → can now be used like assets. NFTs that originally had no yield model → can now generate interest, returns, leverage, and derivatives. NFTs that originally just sat in your wallet as an avatar → can now become staked assets, collateral, or liquidity positions. One-sentence summary: NFT financialization is about turning NFTs into assets that can be used inside DeFi. So why is this becoming a trend? The reason is very simple: 1. The financial potential of NFTs goes far beyond simple trading Within the overall NFT market, pure collectible trading is only a small part. The real long-term, sustainable, and scalable market lies in: Financial services Asset management Collateralized lending Rights and yield derivatives Liquidity protocols Asset pricing models It’s like houses: the house itself is a vessel of value, but the mortgage market is the truly massive market. It’s the same with NFTs: holding them is only the beginning. Using NFTs in financial activities is where the real market lies. 2. NFTs are inherently asset-like The asset nature of NFTs comes from: Scarcity Tradability Price volatility On-chain ownership and provenance As long as something satisfies these characteristics, it has the basic conditions to be financialized. 3. DeFi’s growth needs new forms of collateral For DeFi to continue growing, it needs more “collateralizable assets.” But mainstream collateral types (like ETH and stablecoins) have limited room to expand. NFTs are naturally suitable as a new source of growth. 4. NFT players and DeFi players overlap heavily People who talk about NFTs every day are also among the most active asset users. Providing financialization services is essentially directly serving this group of high-value users. The core underlying logic of NFT financialization (must understand) The essence of NFT financialization cannot be separated from two concepts: Price Discovery and Capital Efficiency. 1. Price Discovery Before financialization, NFT prices were determined by: Rarity Narrative and hype Social/media attention Trader sentiment KOL influence Project team actions This is a classic “unstable market pricing” structure. Financialization makes prices more predictable by introducing: Discount rates implied by lending markets Liquidity depth in LP pools Trading demand in derivatives markets Pricing models from oracles Put simply: the price of NFTs is moving from “subjective perception” to “objective pricing.” 2. Capital Efficiency Before financialization, an NFT: Could only be held after purchase Tied up capital Could not generate yield After financialization, an NFT: Can be used as collateral Can be borrowed against Can be used to sell options Can be fractionalized Can provide liquidity Can be used with leverage to go long In other words, an NFT is no longer the “end-point asset” — it becomes the starting point of capital usage. This is the real core of the ecosystem moving from 0 to 1. The four main tracks of NFT financialization (complete structure you must know) NFT financialization is not a single product. It is a complete system that can be broken down into four primary directions: 1. Collateral & Lending This is the basic structure underlying everything in NFT financialization, and the logic is straightforward: You own a very valuable NFT. You don’t intend to sell it, but you still want to get liquidity from it. What do you do? You, being clever, pledge this NFT to a protocol. The protocol lends you ETH or stablecoins based on the NFT’s value, while the NFT is locked in the protocol until you pay back your debt. This process solves a critical problem: an NFT is an asset, but previously you couldn’t “extract liquidity without selling.” Collateralized borrowing solves exactly that. 2. NFT Liquidity NFTs are naturally illiquid, because each one is “unique.” But financialization needs exactly the opposite — products must become “liquid.” So how can a unique product like an NFT gain liquidity? There are many ways, including but not limited to: AMM pools Tiered pricing by NFT ranges Floor-price-based NFT pools Batch NFT liquidity pools Automated order book depth NFT vaults The essence of all of these is to transform “unique assets” into “tradeable assets.” 3. NFT Fractionalization Many NFTs are extremely expensive. At their peak, some were selling for tens of millions of dollars, and even now, after years of cooling down, valuable NFTs still have very high entry barriers. So NFT fractionalization appeared: taking an NFT that is too expensive to buy outright and splitting it into many “shares,” so more people can participate — similar to stock splits or fund units. Fractionalization solves two problems: High-priced NFTs are impossible to access → fragmentation lowers entry barriers Pricing is hard to discover → the market can price the fractions via trading It turns NFTs from a game only a few can play into something that many can participate in. 4. NFT Derivatives Once NFTs have a sufficiently robust price foundation, derivatives can be built on top: NFT options (calls and puts) NFT perpetual contracts NFT indices NFT volatility indices NFT swap contracts NFT shorting tools These derivatives turn the NFT market from “one-way trading only” into a market where you can: Go long Go short Hedge Arbitrage Use leverage The range of strategies becomes very rich — and NFTs are completely transformed into a financial market. Let’s break the system down and explain each key module in simple terms 1. NFT Valuation Systems Financialization requires accurate pricing, the “objective prices” we mentioned earlier. But NFT prices are hard to predict because: Rarities differ Each individual piece is unique Liquidity is extremely poor Trades are discontinuous To address these issues, NFT valuation systems have emerged, primarily using: Floor-price-based models Rarity-weighted models Polynomial regression prediction models Machine learning models Multi-market weighted pricing Aggregated NFT oracle feeds The ultimate goal: establish a standard price that can be used for lending, trading, and collateralization. 2. Liquidation Mechanisms Financialization must have a liquidation system; otherwise, security cannot be guaranteed. NFT liquidations are much harder than fungible token liquidations because non-fungibility makes each NFT’s value different. The most direct consequences are: difficulty in liquidation and extreme price swings. So we get mechanisms like: Collateralization ratios Safety margins Auction-based liquidation Offsetting liquidation via LPs Batch liquidation Delayed liquidation mechanisms Overcollateralization buffers This system ensures NFT lending markets don’t end up with large masses of bad debt. 3. NFT Liquidity Pools Liquidity is the core attribute of any financial product — NFTs are no exception. That’s why NFT Liquidity Pools are indispensable. Current forms of NFT liquidity pools include: Single-sided NFT pools AMM automated market-making pools NFT/ETH trading pairs NFT floor-price futures pools Synthetic NFT asset pools Through these pools, we can build: Automated trading Deep order-book-like liquidity Stable price ranges Swap and exchange mechanisms NFT-to-NFT trading They make the NFT market tradable and give NFTs continuous pricing. 4. Synthetic NFTs To allow NFTs to be used as collateral without actually transferring the original NFT, synthetic NFTs were created. They have several uses: Use collateral to peg and track the NFT’s price Mint “equivalent NFT tokens” Let NFTs trade like ERC-20 tokens Synthetic NFTs are the “ultimate weapon” for NFT liquidity in the context of financialization. Five key pain points NFT financialization is solving The NFT market originally had many problems: Poor liquidity High transaction costs Violent price swings No ability to borrow/loan No way to short or hedge Financialization addresses these one by one: 1. Poor liquidity → AMMs and pools provide continuous liquidity NFT financialization moves NFTs from peer-to-peer trading to pool-based trading. 2. Hard to sell listings → liquidity becomes constant You no longer need: A specific buyer A manual listing To rely on “getting lucky” to find a match 3. No way to hedge risk → derivatives provide hedging tools You can: Short by selling NFT liquidity tokens Use NFT put options to hedge downside Use perpetuals to short similar assets 4. No yield → DeFi-style structures provide returns You can even: Pledge an NFT as collateral to earn interest Deposit into NFT LPs to earn fees Go long/short and earn spread Rent out NFTs to earn rental income Sell certain rights of an NFT to earn income This transformation is crucial: NFTs are no longer just “things you spend money on,” but become assets that can generate money. Eight major application scenarios of NFT financialization NFT collateralized lending: obtain liquidity without selling the asset. NFT automated market making: easier trading and more stable pricing. NFT fractionalization: lower entry barriers and broaden participant base. NFT options and perpetuals: provide hedging, leverage, and arbitrage markets. NFT asset management: funds, portfolio management, index-based investing. NFT rentals: game NFTs and others can be rented out to generate profit. NFT synthetic assets and indices: treat NFTs as “index-like assets” for investment. New financial products from NFT + DeFi: yield strategies, leveraged products, LP positions, structured portfolios, and more. Future trends in NFT financialization Trend 1: NFTs will become fully DeFi-native Collateral, lending, leverage, options, and derivatives will become basic infrastructure. Trend 2: NFTs will merge with on-chain identity (DID) NFTs representing user identity will help determine credit scores and borrowing limits. Trend 3: “NFT = asset certificate” will become the default perception Membership cards, real-world assets, in-game items, tickets, certificates — all will become NFTs that can be financialized. Trend 4: Composable financial products will emerge NFT + LP + lending + shorting — complex financial structures will become mainstream strategies. Trend 5: NFTs will move from “speculative market” to “structured financial market” They will gain a mature financial ecosystem, like stocks and bonds already have. In closing In the past, when you bought an NFT, all you could do was wait for the price to rise. Now, when you buy an NFT, you can: Use it as collateral Borrow against it Rent it out Earn yield Hedge risk Use it for portfolio hedging Join derivatives markets Add leverage Lend it out to others Provide liquidity Receive liquidity mining rewards Obtain portfolio-level returns NFTs are no longer just “digital collectibles” — they have become carriers for on-chain assets.And NFT financialization is exactly about enabling every on-chain asset to be: Usable Composable Liquid Borrowable Yield-bearing This is a key piece in the true maturation of the Web3 asset ecosystem. Quote First Web 3.0 Crypto Exchange. Telegram: https://superex.me/3uWwpjd Support: support@superex.com
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