Real-world assets are making waves in Brazil's financial ecosystem. A tokenized credit card receivables platform just launched with backing from a $200M financing facility through Mars Capital. What makes it stand out? The structure delivers approximately 13% USD yield while maintaining a clean risk profile — transactions settle directly through established Visa and Mastercard payment networks, with the receivables completely ringfenced from merchant credit exposure. Essentially, it's taking traditional financial receivables, wrapping them in blockchain rails, and letting DeFi participants earn yield on institutionally-backed assets without the usual counterparty risks.

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BearMarketSurvivorvip
· 8h ago
13% returns sound good, but can Brazil really hold up? --- It's either RWA or DeFi, honestly just the same old packaging. --- Mars Capital invested 200M, betting that this model can succeed in emerging markets. --- Visa/Mastercard endorsements definitely boost confidence, but are the risks really ringfenced? --- After so many years of a bear market, I'm still a bit cautious about such high yields. --- The key is whether Brazil's financial infrastructure can support this approach. --- Is DeFi combined with institutional assets the savior? I doubt it. --- 13% sounds great in theory, but how much can you actually take home? That's the question.
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VitalikFanAccountvip
· 8h ago
Brazil's recent RWA operations are really impressive, with a 13% return that's no joke. Mars Capital invested $200M, they're serious this time. Traditional finance wrapped in blockchain technology can run DeFi, quite interesting. Backed by Visa and Mastercard, this is definitely more reliable than a pure air project. Wait, is ringfenced truly isolated or just another fancy term?
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MEVHunterBearishvip
· 8h ago
Brazil's recent RWA approach is indeed impressive, with a 13% yield and native on-chain settlement—how can you not be tempted? Mars Capital investing $200M—what kind of innovations can they bring? Let me see if this risk model is truly clean. Visa and Mastercard going directly on-chain? Is this really paving the way for compliance, or is it just marketing hype? However, receivables tokenization has been tried before—what makes this time different?
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GasWastervip
· 8h ago
Brazil's RWA play is quite aggressive, with a 13% yield combined with Visa and Mastercard's settlement network—sounds reliable. DeFi finally no longer has to gamble on some shitcoin, now starting to reap the benefits of real assets. Mars Capital invested 200M, this time it's not just a vaporware project, right? With such high returns, there must be some hidden risks, right? RWA is the future of crypto; traditional finance yields are too disappointing. The feeling of compliance being on-chain finally brings some regulatory benefits. This kind of structural design truly addresses the counterparty risk pain point. Brazil is moving pretty fast in this area, while the US is still dragging its feet.
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GasFeeTearsvip
· 9h ago
Brazil is implementing this real asset on-chain, a 13% return sounds pretty good Mars Capital invested 200 million yuan, whether this is stable or not depends on what happens next Packaging credit card receivables on-chain, I didn't think of this approach Wait, can ringfence really provide protection... who dares to guarantee the risks It's yield farming again and institutional endorsement, truly bringing traditional finance onto the chain
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SchrodingerAirdropvip
· 9h ago
Brazil's move is quite interesting; a 13% return sounds good, but you need to keep an eye on the risks.
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