陈剑Jason 🐡
陈剑Jason 🐡|Sep 10, 2025 02:10
GAIB is a project I've been supporting for a long time. A lot of friends are still a bit unclear about what GAIB actually does. One moment it's about GPUs and RWA, then stablecoins, and now there's even a robot involved. But actually, the top-level framework of GAIB is quite clear: RWAFi. By tokenizing real-world assets (RWA) on-chain and combining them with DeFi, it enhances capital efficiency, using stablecoins as the medium to distribute asset yields. First, GAIB tokenizes real-world hardware assets like GPUs and robots as collateral to generate the stablecoin AID. These assets need to meet a few conditions: first, they must be capital-intensive, requiring large investments and long R&D cycles. Second, the hardware itself must retain value and generate sustainable income. Lastly, these assets must be networked and verifiable. Asset holders can then use them as collateral to borrow funds, expand production, and allocate a portion of future profits as dividends. AID stablecoins serve as the medium generated from this collateral, and holders of AID can earn future asset yields. GAIB has already explored this framework through its first use case with GPUs. Now, it's moving into the robotics field. Similar to GPUs, manufacturers can use their robotic assets and production supply chains as collateral to access more funding. AID stablecoin holders gain an additional source of income. The core of GAIB lies in continuously identifying high-quality RWA assets, injecting capital into them, and channeling the returns back to AID stablecoins, thereby positioning AID as an RWA yield-bearing stablecoin. Of course, these assets inherently carry risks, whether it's depreciation or uncertainty in future returns. That's why the foundation of AID is still backed by U.S. Treasury bonds as a stabilizing anchor.
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