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Fortune
Fortune
Carlos Garcia

Stanford professor raises $15 million for Babylon, a decentralized protocol to turn Bitcoin into collateral

two men pose for camera (Credit: Courtesy of Babylon)

When a Bitcoin owner wants to generate yield from their holdings, they typically go to a third party. That middleman is usually a stablecoin issuer or exchange like Tether or Coinbase that allows the holder to swap their Bitcoin for collateral—in the form of stablecoin or wrapped BTC—to be used in lending protocols like Aave. Now a Stanford professor named David Tse is promoting a new alternative to those systems. 

Tse is the co-founder of a startup called Babylon that has created a decentralized protocol, called BTCVaults, which offers users a more direct way to collateralize their Bitcoin. 

On Wednesday, the company announced that it raised $15 million dollars from a16z crypto, the crypto arm of the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. Tse did not disclose Babylon’s valuation in an interview with Fortune. 

“We’re building protocols using cutting edge technology to enable people to cut out the middle person and go straight to the goal, which is to be productive,” Tse said.

There are certain downsides when Bitcoin owners send their holdings to a third party, Tse says. The intermediaries take possession of the cryptocurrency, and the user loses control of the key. Babylon’s protocol, in contrast, enables collateralization without the user relinquishing control of the Bitcoin. 

Tse views his company’s competition as the centralized services like Coinbase, Kraken, and Tether. 

The company plans to integrate its technology with the lending protocol Aave in the second quarter of 2026. For now, Babylon does not generate revenue but hopes to after the launch with Aave. The company currently has more than 40 employees. 

David Tse co-founded Babylon in 2021 with Fisher Yu. The company does not have a CEO; Tse is the research scientist and Yu is the CTO. Tse has been a professor at Stanford for more than a decade, where he runs a research lab about blockchains. He has a PhD from MIT and taught at UC-Berkeley for 18 years.

Tse says that he started a company to give his research a broader purpose. Deliverables in academia, he says, are research papers, which he equates to pieces of artwork that can only be admired by a few people. 

“A startup is the natural way of converting research, innovation, and ideas into a product that people can use,” he said.  

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