Dear Reader,
Liquidity pools are like Airbnb for digital assets, except the guests pay rent every single hour and you never have to clean up after them.
Forget all the technical jargon you've heard. Think of it like rental property.
You own a beach house. It's beautiful. It's worth $300,000. You know it will appreciate in value over time, and rightfully so.
So, you hold on to it, but it sits empty most of the year.
Meanwhile, your neighbor owns the exact same property: same location, same value, same everything.
Except your neighbor rents his out $200 per night. Booked 20 nights per month on average.
That's $4,000 monthly, $48,000 per year. Same asset, he's just making it work for him.
Think about it for a second. Why would you refuse to rent your investment property to tenants?
It makes no sense.
Yet, that's exactly what you're doing with your digital assets, and that can stop today.
Here's how it actually works…
Liquidity pools are like short-term rental platforms for digital assets.
When you put your XRP or Bitcoin or Ethereum into a pool, you're essentially saying, "Hey, traders can use my assets to make their trades happen." In exchange, they pay you a fee for that service every single trade.
It's like renting out your house by the hour instead of by the night.
Let me walk you through a real example.
Say you have $50,000 in XRP or Ethereum right now. It's probably sitting in your wallet or on Coinbase doing nothing like a beach house sitting empty.
But if you put that XRP or Ethereum into a liquidity pool, traders use your assets to facilitate their trades.
Every time they trade, they pay a 0.3% fee.
If $1 million in trades happen daily using the pool you're in, that's $3,000 in daily fee generated.
If you own 1% of that pool ($50k of a $5 million pool), you collect 1% of those fees, meaning $30 per day.
That's $900 per month. Or almost $11,000 per year.
This is very realistic, from assets you own and were planning to hold anyway.
Prices go up, great. You benefit from appreciation and you collected almost 11K in fees.
Prices go down, you still collected 11K in fees, hedging your investment.
Price goes sideways. You're making money while everyone else is making nothing.
It's like collecting rent whether your property value goes up, down, or stays flat.
So, it's a win-win-win situation.
Now, let's talk about the concerns.
What if someone steals my assets? These pools use smart contracts – automated systems with unbreakable rules. Think of them like a property management company that can't be bribed, can't steal, and executes perfectly every time.
What if the renters damage my asset? They have to put up collateral first. Before someone can use your liquidity, they put up more value than what they're using. It's like a renter giving you a $5,000 security deposit for a $2,000/month apartment.
I'm Tan Gera. I'm an ex-Wall Street investment banker and I'm also a CFA charterholder.
We currently have 4,000 members that we're helping do this.
If you're not earning anything on your digital assets right now, if your investment property is sitting empty, I encourage you to watch the training we've created that details everything.
You spent thousands buying digital assets. You're holding it long term because you believe in it and rightfully so.
But while you're holding, exchanges like Coinbase are putting your assets into liquidity pools and collecting those fees for themselves.
They are the property management company collecting rent on your beach house and they're not paying you anything.
They're just making it work, but for them.
So why not be the landlord yourself?
Click here to watch the free training.
Granted, we cannot make reckless promises when it comes to trading, but…
It's time to start collecting rent on the assets you already own.
See you there,
Tan Gera, CFA
Co-Founder | Decentralized Masters
P.S. You're probably leaving at least $500/month on the table right now. How much have you given up over the past year? Two years? Watch the free training now.
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