Large investors are gaining new ways to access yield on institutional bitcoin as lending infrastructure from Lombard and Bitwise moves closer to launch.
Lombard, a Bitcoin lending infrastructure firm, has unveiled a strategic partnership with Bitwise Asset Management aimed at letting institutions earn yield and borrow against Bitcoin without moving coins out of custody.
The agreement, disclosed at the Digital Asset Summit in New York, targets asset managers, corporate treasuries, and high-net-worth individuals that hold significant BTC positions but have had few compliant ways to generate returns. Moreover, these groups have generally been blocked from using most onchain credit markets.
Bitwise, a global crypto asset manager with $15B+ AUM and more than 40 investment products, will design scalable yield strategies for the estimated $500 billion in institutionally custodied Bitcoin that Lombard wants to activate.
Lombard’s CEO Jacob Phillips said the core innovation is its Bitcoin Smart Accounts framework, which links institutional custody systems with onchain finance that historically operated in isolation.
Under the model, Bitwise structures strategies that combine decentralized lending markets with tokenized real-world assets, while Morpho provides the underlying decentralized lending infrastructure for borrowing against Bitcoin positions. However, the custody of the asset itself remains with established providers.
The platform uses Bitcoin-native tools, including partially signed transactions (PSBTs) and timelocks, to attest to collateral and encode constraints. That way, positions can be represented and managed onchain without transferring the underlying BTC away from its original custodian.
Phillips argued this structure reduces three major pain points at once: custody risk, bridge risk, and counterparty risk. That said, it still relies on institutional-grade custody and transparent smart-contract infrastructure to maintain trust.
Lombard estimates roughly $500 billion worth of Bitcoin currently sits with institutional custodians, mostly idle from an onchain perspective. Most of that capital does not participate in credit markets or other bitcoin in defi strategies.
Today, Bitcoin’s total value locked in DeFi is about $2.93 billion, according to DefiLlama. This is still a small share of Bitcoin’s overall market capitalization of around $1.4 trillion, yet the number has been trending higher over recent quarters.
Babylon Protocol currently leads Bitcoin-based DeFi with approximately $2.8 billion in total value locked, while Lombard ranks second at around $744 million. Moreover, several adjacent integrations suggest a broader shift toward yield-bearing Bitcoin products.
In February, Telegram added yield-generating vaults to its crypto wallet, covering Bitcoin, Ether, and USDT. The move signaled rising interest in embedding passive income features directly into consumer-facing apps.
Then in March, Bitcoin staking protocol Babylon integrated with hardware wallet manufacturer Ledger, enabling users to earn yield while maintaining self-custody via hardware-based transaction signing. However, these solutions primarily address retail and early-adopter segments rather than large financial institutions.
Back in January, Bitwise had already teamed up with Morpho to launch non-custodial vaults for earning yield through overcollateralized lending. That partnership laid much of the technical groundwork that now underpins the broader bitwise lombard partnership.
For the typical institutional bitcoin investor, choices have long been constrained. Historically, earning yield or accessing liquidity on large holdings meant withdrawing coins from custody, taking on new counterparties, or potentially triggering taxable disposals.
The Lombard and Bitwise structure is designed to avoid those trade-offs. By keeping BTC under its existing custody arrangement while connecting that custody to onchain credit rails, investors can access borrowing and yield strategies without altering how they hold the asset.
Phillips describes this shift as transforming Bitcoin from a passive store of value into productive capital for balance sheets and portfolios. Moreover, the team plans to add more custodians and protocols over time, turning the system into an interoperable liquidity layer around institutional custody.
The initial rollout of the Lombard-Bitwise solution is scheduled for Q2 2026, subject to integration and compliance milestones. Lombard says it will broaden custodian coverage and connect additional DeFi protocols after launch as demand grows.
If successful, the initiative could bring a meaningful slice of institutionally custodied Bitcoin into onchain markets, deepening liquidity for borrowing and lending. That said, regulatory clarity and risk management standards will remain decisive factors for widespread adoption.
In summary, Lombard and Bitwise are building a bridge that keeps institutional Bitcoin in trusted custody while unlocking onchain yield and credit, potentially redefining how large investors treat their BTC reserves.

