Hashi, a new Bitcoin finance protocol built on the Sui blockchain, has announced early participation commitments from institutional firms including BitGo and FalconX, positioning itself as infrastructure for BTC-backed lending and collateral management at a time when less than 1% of Bitcoin’s supply is active in decentralized finance.
The Sui Foundation published the Hashi announcement on March 19, 2026, describing the protocol as a primitive designed to support BTC-backed lending, structured products, and automated collateral management. The pitch centers on a striking gap: roughly 0.22% of Bitcoin’s supply, or about $3.07 billion, is currently deployed in DeFi, against a total BTC market of approximately $1.4 trillion.
That number frames the opportunity Hashi is targeting. If even a small fraction of dormant Bitcoin moved into onchain lending or collateral structures, the capital flow would dwarf most existing DeFi protocols. Whether Hashi can capture that flow is another question entirely.
The protocol’s stated design lets Bitcoin holders earn yield through onchain lending and borrowing without relying on wrapped-token intermediaries. For holders who have watched projects attempt to build DeFi directly on Bitcoin’s base layer, Hashi represents an alternative path: using Sui’s speed and programmability rather than trying to extend Bitcoin’s own scripting language.
What the BitGo and FalconX commitments signal
The Sui Foundation’s announcement names BitGo, Bullish, Erebor Bank, FalconX, Ledger, and Fordefi among early committed participants or launch partners. BitGo is one of the largest qualified custodians in crypto, and FalconX operates as a prime brokerage for institutional digital asset trading.
Having recognized custodians and trading firms attached to a protocol launch matters. It suggests the project has cleared at least an initial institutional due diligence bar, and it means custody and execution infrastructure could be available from day one rather than bolted on later.
Cointelegraph separately reported early participation commitments from institutions including BitGo, Bullish, and FalconX, providing additional coverage of the announcement. Joshua Lim, cited in the Sui Foundation’s post, described Hashi as “a complementary addition” to existing Bitcoin finance infrastructure.
That said, the commitments were not independently confirmed through press releases or public filings from each named firm. The distinction between exploratory interest and binding operational commitments is not clear from the available information. Readers tracking institutional Bitcoin flows through ETFs and other channels should note that announcement-stage partnerships do not always translate into launch-day liquidity.
Execution gaps between announcement and mainnet
Hashi’s devnet is described as imminent, with mainnet planned for later in 2026. No devnet artifacts, smart contract audits, or onchain deployment records have been publicly reviewed or released as of this writing.
The protocol’s marketing describes it as institution-ready, but that framing remains positioning language rather than a verified regulatory or compliance status. No specific regulatory approval tied to Hashi was found in the research for this article. The broader regulatory environment for crypto lending is still unsettled; a July 2025 SEC-hosted submission argued that crypto lending regulation needs clearer distinctions around securities status and collateral treatment.
For context, the U.S. government established a policy framework around digital asset custody through the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve executive order in March 2025, signaling growing official attention to how Bitcoin is held and managed institutionally. Hashi’s emphasis on transparent collateral management and reduced rehypothecation risk aligns directionally with those regulatory concerns, but alignment with a trend is not the same as regulatory approval.
Three things would materially strengthen Hashi’s case before mainnet: independent confirmations from each named institutional partner, published smart contract audits from recognized security firms, and verifiable onchain deployment data showing the protocol functions as described.
The Bitcoin-in-DeFi gap is real, and institutional interest in BTC yield products continues to grow. Whether Hashi is the protocol that closes that gap depends on execution milestones that are still months away.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
