google-driveYield, Borrowing Demand, and Velocity

Why payments turn episodic borrowing into a compounding system.

Traditional DeFi lending markets exhibit episodic borrowing demand. Users borrow capital to exploit a specific opportunity and repay when that opportunity resolves. Borrowing is sparse, irregular, and tightly coupled to market timing.

This can be represented as:

B_legacy(t) = Σ_{i=1..N} I_opportunity_i(t) * b_i

Where:

  • B_legacy(t) is total borrowed capital at time t

  • I_opportunity_i(t) is an indicator function (1 if opportunity i exists at time t, else 0)

  • b_i is the size of the borrow tied to opportunity i

This structure produces:

  • Liquidity cliffs

  • Volatile interest rates

  • Poor capital utilization

  • Fragile lender incentives

GigaETH changes the shape of borrowing demand by tying it to payments, not speculation.

When borrowing backs real-world spending, demand becomes continuous rather than event-driven. Users maintain standing liquidity lines backed by productive ETH. Borrowing becomes a function of usage, not timing.

This can be represented as:

B_giga(t) = Σ_{u=1..U} min( L_u(t), S_u(t) )

Where:

  • B_giga(t) is total borrowed capital at time t

  • L_u(t) is user u’s borrowing limit derived from risk-weighted LST collateral

  • S_u(t) is user u’s spend demand over time

This formulation removes spikes and replaces them with steady-state utilization.


Velocity as the Multiplier

In payments systems, velocity matters more than notional size.

Define:

  • C = total normalized ETH collateral in the system

  • α = average loan-to-value ratio

  • v = payment velocity (number of times borrowed liquidity turns per year)

Then total economic throughput is:

Legacy DeFi implicitly assumes:

Borrow once. Deploy once. Unwind.

Payments increase v dramatically. The same borrowed liquidity can be:

  • Spent daily

  • Repaid incrementally

  • Reborrowed automatically

This allows a single unit of collateral to support multiple economic events without liquidation or exit from yield.


Interest and Revenue Formation

Bidder yield is derived from continuous utilization, not sporadic leverage.

Where:

  • r(t) is the clearing interest rate determined by bidder auctions

  • B_giga(t) is smooth, predictable borrowing demand

Because utilization is stable, bidders can price liquidity tighter, reducing user costs while improving system reliability.


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