S&P Sounds Alarm: Bitcoin-Backed Bonds Face Stress Test Post-Selloff!

Published 1 week ago4 minute read
David Isong
David Isong
S&P Sounds Alarm: Bitcoin-Backed Bonds Face Stress Test Post-Selloff!

Wall Street's pioneering attempt at a public bond sale, collateralized by bitcoin loans, has encountered significant turbulence following a sharp decline in bitcoin's value, which triggered a wave of forced liquidations. Investment bankers at Jefferies have been actively engaging institutional investors for several months to secure a $188 million asset-backed bond deal. This innovative structure is tied to thousands of loans issued by the crypto lender Ledn and is designed to package one-year loans extended to individuals who provide bitcoin as collateral. The proceeds from this bond sale were intended to furnish Ledn with additional capital to originate new credit.

However, the transaction faced an early stress test when bitcoin's price plummeted approximately 27% since mid-January, leading to numerous margin calls across the loan pool. Consequently, Ledn was compelled to liquidate approximately one-quarter of the loans originally earmarked to back the deal. This incident underscored the inherent fragility of such bitcoin-backed credit products during periods of high price volatility, as margin calls were rapidly triggered throughout the loan book. Despite these disruptions, the Ledn bonds are projected to offer investors returns ranging between 3 and 6 percentage points above benchmark rates.

Jefferies, a firm that has been strategically expanding its footprint in structured finance, has increasingly offered more complex and less tested asset-backed products. The bank has also made substantial inroads into crypto dealmaking, notably advising trading platform NinjaTrade on its $1.5 billion sale to the exchange Kraken last year. Initially, Jefferies informed investors that the Ledn bonds would be supported by $199 million in bitcoin-backed loans and an additional $1 million in cash. Following the extensive liquidations, this collateral mix underwent a significant alteration, with the pool now comprising roughly $150 million in loans and a substantially increased $50 million in cash. This shift highlights that a bond initially marketed as primarily supported by interest-generating loans is now much more heavily reliant on cash, revealing the structural vulnerabilities during sharp market drawdowns.

Despite the challenges, the bond deal remains on schedule to close on February 18, according to S&P Global Ratings, which assigned a rating to the notes. Ledn is now tasked with redeploying the proceeds from these liquidations into new loans to generate the necessary interest income to fulfill payments to bondholders. S&P's ratings report meticulously detailed the structure and identified key risks associated with Ledn Issuer Trust 2026-1. As of December 31, 2025, the initial collateral pool consisted of 5,441 fixed-rate balloon loans extended to 2,914 borrowers, with an aggregate principal balance of approximately $199.1 million. These loans were secured by an estimated 4,079 bitcoin, valued at around $356.9 million at the cutoff date, boasting a weighted-average interest rate of 11.8% and a weighted-average loan-to-value (LTV) ratio of 55.8%.

S&P's analysis confirmed that bitcoin's sharp decline in early February necessitated Ledn to liquidate a "significant share" of the loans designated for the deal. All liquidations were reportedly executed below an 81.4% LTV threshold. This action led to a portfolio adjustment, shifting the mix towards fewer loans and a greater proportion of cash in the funding account, while maintaining the overall collateral package at $200 million. The rating agency's assessment focused critically on borrower default behavior, recovery rates during liquidation events, and concentration risk. S&P emphasized that margin-driven defaults represent the most acute stress scenario, primarily because liquidations occur precisely when bitcoin prices are falling, potentially into thin or volatile markets where execution slippage can significantly impact recovery values.

Given that Ledn underwrites loans predominantly based on bitcoin collateral rather than comprehensive borrower credit profiles, S&P noted the limited applicability of traditional consumer loan performance metrics. In its 'A' stress level analysis, the agency applied a conservative 100% default assumption. Modeled stresses for the rated notes included a 79% default rate and 68% recovery for the BBB- class A tranche. S&P highlighted several structural mitigants designed to buffer against these risks, including overcollateralization, early amortization triggers, a liquidity reserve funded at 5% of the note balance, and Ledn’s automated liquidation engine. This engine, according to S&P, has successfully liquidated 7,493 loans over seven years without incurring principal losses.

However, S&P also flagged crucial weaknesses inherent in the structure. These include bitcoin's historically high volatility, ongoing regulatory uncertainty surrounding cryptocurrencies, and a potential conflict of interest stemming from Ledn’s past practice of rolling loans by capitalizing unpaid interest. To address this, Ledn intends to mandate cash interest payments for renewals starting in 2027, a measure S&P believes will progressively reduce liquidity stress over time. According to the Wall Street Journal, should bitcoin’s price drop and a loan’s value exceed 70% of its collateral, borrowers are required to add more bitcoin. If the LTV reaches 80%, Ledn’s system automatically liquidates the collateral to repay the outstanding debt.

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