Coinbase: Fannie Mae mortgage initiative links cryptocurrency with real economy

Coinbase: Fannie Mae mortgage initiative links cryptocurrency with real economy
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Coinbase: Fannie Mae mortgage initiative links cryptocurrency with real economy; Illustration: Illustration: Gwen P; Source: Shutterstock; Source: Illustration: Gwen P; Source: Shutterstock
  • Borrowers can pledge crypto as collateral for a second loan that funds the down payment on a home.
  • The collaboration between Fannie Mae and Coinbase is seen as a paradigm shift for crypto.

Coinbase’s collaboration with Fannie Mae on crypto-backed mortgages ushers in a new era for cryptocurrency, according to industry insiders.

The play is less about immediate changes and more about setting a structural precedent, said David Duong, Coinbase’s global head of investment research.

“Allowing borrowers to use Bitcoin or USDC as pledged collateral — rather than selling it — incrementally reinforces the narrative of crypto as productive collateral and deepens the link between onchain wealth and the real economy, particularly US housing,” he said.

Duong’s comments come as the industry has suffered from a $2 trillion drawdown, with Bitcoin down 47% from its October peak of $126,000. Other cryptoassets have fared even worse, with Solana down 72%.

Yet the partnership represents a new development in crypto markets, linking digital assets directly to the performance of the US housing and interest rates cycle.

“This is another data point in a broader shift from price speculation toward balance-sheet utility,” he said.

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Under a new product launched by Better Home & Finance in partnership with Coinbase, borrowers can pledge Bitcoin or USDC as collateral for a second loan that funds the down payment on a conforming mortgage eligible for purchase by Fannie Mae.

The digital assets remain in custody through Coinbase Prime, the crypto exchange’s custodian division, for the life of the loan, allowing borrowers to retain exposure to potential appreciation while securing conventional home financing.

The primary mortgage remains within the traditional underwriting framework. But the innovation lies in how borrower equity is structured.

“This vehicle shifts a portion of the borrower’s equity into segregated digital asset collateral,” Duong said.

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The product also addresses a longstanding friction point for US crypto holders: the need to liquidate digital assets to fund major purchases. By allowing borrowers to pledge crypto instead of selling it, the model preserves exposure to potential upside while avoiding immediate tax liabilities.

Yet crypto-backed lending is not new. Platforms like Nexo let customers borrow stablecoins while using cryptos like Bitcoin as collateral.

What is new is formal recognition within the US government-run housing ecosystem.

Following last year’s directive from the Federal Housing Finance Agency urging Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to evaluate how crypto holdings could factor into risk models, this marks one of the first concrete implementations, Duong said.

Macro amplified

Speculative assets like crypto are greatly impacted by Interest rates set by the Federal Reserve.

And as crypto becomes embedded in mortgage structures, it grows even more directly linked to the US rates and housing cycle. That means both opportunity and exposure.

Over time, Duong argues, developments like this support structural demand for high-quality assets such as Bitcoin and USDC. They deepen the case for digital assets as durable stores of value and collateral.

But the flip side is increased cyclicality for an industry already considered to be highly volatile. If the initiative takes off, crypto becomes more sensitive to mortgage rates, housing demand and broader macro conditions.

Crypto market movers

  • Bitcoin is down 1.6% over the past 24 hours, trading at $66,395.
  • Ethereum is down 1.4% over the past 24 hours at $2,025.

What we’re reading 

Lance Datskoluo is DL News’ Europe-based markets correspondent. Got a tip? Email him at lance@dlnews.com.

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