Markets Overview

Fira is modular lending infrastructure. Each market is an independent instance with its own collateral, loan token, parameters, and risk profile.

What Defines a Market

Every Fira market is defined by:

Parameter
Description

Collateral asset

The token deposited by borrowers

Loan asset

The token borrowed against collateral

Max LTV (Loan-to-Value)

Maximum borrowing ratio

LLTV

Liquidation LTV — the threshold at which positions can be liquidated

Oracle

Price feed determining collateral value

Maturity

Term length for fixed-rate positions

Protocol fee

Fee charged by the protocol (in APR)

IRM

Interest Rate Model governing rate discovery

This modular design means Fira can support any pair of assets — stablecoins, yield-bearing tokens, LSTs, or governance tokens — each with parameters calibrated to the specific risk profile of that pair.

V1 Market Types

Fira V1 introduces three market types, each serving different credit needs:

Fixed-Rate Markets

Borrowers and lenders lock rates for a defined maturity via Bond Tokens (BTs). BTs trade at a discount before maturity on the fixed-rate AMM. The discount determines the implied rate.

Fixed-Rate Markets — Protocol

Floating-Rate Markets

Variable-rate borrowing and lending without maturity constraints. Rates adjust dynamically based on utilization — similar to existing DeFi lending protocols, but integrated into Fira's infrastructure.

Floating-Rate Markets — Protocol

Dynamic Lending

LPs provide liquidity to the fixed-rate AMM while unused liquidity is rehypothecated to floating-rate vaults. LPs earn both trading fees and lending yield. Coupon Tokens (CTs) represent the yield portion and are tradable.

Rehypothecation · Fixed-Rate Markets — Protocol · Floating-Rate Markets — Protocol

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