
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Sui powers BTCfi with speed, scalability, and low fees for trading, lending, and yield.
BTC wrappers on Sui include WBTC (custodial), LBTC (staking-based via Babylon) and sBTC (trust-minimized via Stacks).
BTC on Sui can be traded, lent, borrowed, or farmed in vaults for yield.
Risks remain, such as failures, bridges, and exploits; diversify and use audited protocols.
Bitcoin is the world’s most valuable crypto asset, but on its base layer it’s slow, inflexible, and hard to plug into DeFi. BTCfi (Bitcoin DeFi) flips that script by enabling BTC to be borrowed, lent, used for liquidity provision (LP), and as collateral across smart contract platforms.
On Sui, a high-throughput layer-1 built with the Move language, BTCfi is arriving through a growing set of Bitcoin-backed assets, most notably WBTC, LBTC, and sBTC.
This guide breaks down WBTC, LBTC, and sBTC, how they work and how BTC flows into Sui DeFi. It also includes insights from Christian Thompson, Managing Director at the Sui Foundation, who brings deep experience in blockchain security and finance. His perspective highlights why Sui is emerging as a hub for BTCfi and what users should weigh when using these assets.
Why BTCfi on Sui?
Bitcoin DeFi, or BTCfi, needs a home that balances speed, security, and liquidity. While Bitcoin itself is the strongest monetary base in crypto, its native chain is slow and not designed for advanced financial applications.
Sui steps in as a high-performance layer-1 that allows BTC-backed assets to be put to work in lending, trading, and automated strategies. Here’s why Sui is becoming a natural home for BTCfi:
Throughput and UX: Sui’s parallelized execution and object-centric Move language reduce congestion and deliver near-instant transaction finality. This makes swaps, lending, and perpetual trading smooth and efficient—ideal for BTC holders looking to move large volumes of collateral without friction.
Interoperability: The Sui Bridge connects Sui seamlessly with other ecosystems, especially Ethereum, where assets like WBTC are already deeply liquid. Once bridged, these Bitcoin-backed tokens integrate into Sui’s DeFi stack as building blocks for decentralized exchanges, lending protocols, structured products, and more.
Ecosystem momentum: The Sui ecosystem already supports a range of BTC-backed assets including LBTC, tBTC, xBTC, and wBTC. These assets are not just theoretical, they are live and being used in trading and lending platforms like Bluefin, Suilend, and Navi. This growing adoption signals that Sui is becoming a major hub for BTCfi activity.
According to Thompson, “Sui was designed from the outset to handle assets like Bitcoin in a way other chains can’t. Its object-based model treats Bitcoin-backed assets as programmable objects, unlocking powerful use cases like dynamic lending vaults and composable restaking. Combined with parallel execution, this ensures high performance and low fees even in peak conditions.”
The Assets That Power BTCfi on Sui
Before diving into WBTC, LBTC, and sBTC, it’s worth noting that each wrapper takes a different approach to bringing Bitcoin into DeFi. Some prioritize liquidity and speed, others lean toward decentralization or privacy.
Thompson notes that each BTC wrapper has “varying strengths, and that’s a good thing, it means users have a choice. Some prefer the battle-tested liquidity of WBTC, while LBTC and sBTC offer unique benefits for composability, efficiency, or peg assurances.”
1) WBTC (Wrapped Bitcoin)
A Wrapped Bitcoin is 1:1 Bitcoin representation minted on Ethereum (ERC-20), backed by BTC held with approved custodians/merchants (e.g., BitGo and partners). It’s by far the most liquid BTC wrapper across EVM DeFi.
How it reaches Sui:
Users lock/unlock WBTC on Ethereum and bridge it to Sui.
Because WBTC already has deep liquidity and price discovery, it’s often the fastest path to put BTC to work on Sui DEXes, perps, and lending markets.
Trade-off: custodial risk and reliance on the Ethereum-issued token + bridge security model.
Typical Sui use cases:
Deposit as DEX liquidity and farm incentives.
Collateral in money markets for stablecoin borrowing.
Automated vaults/strategies (e.g., wBTC vaults targeting basis or LP yields).
Risk profile:
Custody/issuer: centralized custodians; mint/burn permissions.
Bridge: smart-contract and validator risks across chains.
Market: depegs are rare historically but possible under custody/bridge failure.
2) LBTC (By Lombard Finance)
LBTC is a liquid staking token created by Lombard Finance and backed 1:1 with native Bitcoin. Instead of leaving BTC idle, Lombard routes it into the Babylon protocol, where it can be delegated to finality providers to help secure proof-of-stake and restaking networks.
In return, the BTC earns staking rewards, while LBTC serves as the on-chain representation of that staked Bitcoin. Holders can freely use LBTC across DeFi on Sui and other chains, such as lending, borrowing, trading, or providing liquidity, all while continuing to accrue yield from the underlying staked BTC. This makes LBTC both a bridge for Bitcoin into DeFi and a way to unlock capital efficiency without giving up exposure to BTC itself.
How it reaches Sui:
Users can stake native BTC through Lombard (which utilizes Babylon’s infrastructure) to mint LBTC. Once minted, LBTC can be bridged from other chains or used natively on Sui.
On Sui, LBTC is usable across DeFi — you can lend, borrow, use it as collateral, provide liquidity, trade it. Protocols like BlueFin, Cetus, NAVI, Turbos, SuiLend are some of the integrations.
Typical Sui use cases:
Wanting to earn staking yield on BTC while retaining the ability to use the token in DeFi (instead of locking BTC wholly or just holding it off‐chain).
Using LBTC as collateral or for borrowing/lending on Sui.
Providing liquidity, trading LBTC pairs on Sui DEXes.
Capture incentive rewards for LBTC holders, plus yield from Babylon staking.
Risk profile:
Custody/consortium risk: LBTC is secured by a federation of custodians and multisig infrastructure.
Staking risk: Exposure to Babylon protocol slashing, validator misbehavior, or staking withdrawal delays.
Bridge/contract risk: Cross-chain bridges and smart contracts can be vulnerable to bugs or exploits.
3) sBTC (Stacks)
sBTC is part of Stacks’ Nakamoto release, a design for a trust-minimized two-way peg connecting Bitcoin to Stacks smart contracts. The goal is to reduce reliance on custodians/federations while keeping BTC the monetary base and enabling programmability.
As sBTC circulates in Stacks apps, wrappers/bridges can port it into Sui, expanding BTCfi with stronger peg assurances than traditional custodial models.
Architecture is evolving; always verify the live peg model in current docs before large transfers.
Collateral with stricter peg guarantees (once widely available).
Cross-ecosystem strategies combining Stacks yield with Sui’s speed/liquidity.
Design maturity: newer mechanism; operational details and liquidity depth continue to grow, evaluate audits and on-chain metrics before size-up.
Trade: You can route WBTC and other BTC wrappers through Sui’s decentralized exchanges. Thanks to order book infrastructure like DeepBook, traders benefit from low slippage and unified liquidity across both spot and perpetual markets.
Lend/borrow: BTC-backed assets such as WBTC can be supplied as collateral on Sui’s money markets. This allows you to borrow stablecoins against your BTC or use leverage for directional positions without selling your Bitcoin.
Liquidity provision (LP) and farm: By pairing WBTC with stablecoins or other major tokens, you can provide liquidity to DEXes and earn trading fees plus additional farming rewards. Keep in mind factors like impermanent loss and the sustainability of incentives.
Automate: For those who prefer a hands-off approach, strategy vaults on Sui automatically compound yields or manage basis trades with WBTC. These vaults make it easier to stay exposed to BTCfi without daily active management.
Start with native BTC.
Choose your wrapper:
WBTC for speed, liquidity, and broad app support (custodial model).
LBTC for staking-based yield on BTC via Babylon, with liquid DeFi utility on Sui (Lombard model).
sBTC for an emerging trust-minimized peg designed to align closely with Bitcoin’s security.
Bridge to Sui. Use the Sui Bridge or another audited connector to mint your Sui-based representation of BTC. Always double-check fees, confirmations, and transfer caps.
Deploy in DeFi. Supply liquidity, post collateral in lending markets, or deposit into automated vaults. Monitor positions and manage risk continuously.
WBTC carries centralized custodian exposure.
LBTC depends on Lombard’s custody + Babylon staking design (BTC is held in multisig and staked to earn yield).
sBTC is based on a newer trust-minimized design, which may evolve as it matures.
Mitigation: Diversify across wrappers, avoid concentrating too much BTC in one model, and monitor custodian, federation, and peg updates.
Any movement of assets between chains introduces validator or smart contract risk.
Mitigation: Use Sui’s native bridge or audited connectors. Favor routes that publish audits and run active bug bounty programs.
DEXes, money markets, and vaults can be exploited, or suffer from oracle manipulation and liquidation spirals.
Mitigation: Stick to audited protocols with robust oracle setups and conservative collateral ratios. Test with small amounts before scaling up.
BTC wrappers can experience slippage, depegs, or funding rate squeezes.
Mitigation: Size positions according to liquidity depth, track wrapper prices versus native BTC, and use alerts for peg deviations.
tBTC (Threshold Network): A trust-minimized, non-custodial wrapper using threshold cryptography. Already live on Sui and adding deep BTC liquidity to lending and trading markets.
xBTC (OKX): An exchange-issued wrapped BTC, bringing custodial liquidity from OKX into Sui DeFi.
YBTC / Peg-BTC (Bitlayer): Trust-minimized design using BitVM bridges to move BTC into Sui with fewer intermediaries.
Notably, sBTC is different from stBTC: sBTC (Stacks) is a trust-minimized peg that brings BTC onto smart contracts with Bitcoin-aligned security, while stBTC (Lorenzo) is a liquid staking token representing BTC staked via Babylon, designed to earn yield and boost liquidity in Sui DeFi.
How it reaches Sui:
Typical Sui use cases:
Risk profile:
Here is the summary of the key differences between WBTC, LBTC, and sBTC to see how each fits into Sui’s BTCfi ecosystem.
| Dimension | WBTC | LBTC | sBTC |
| Backing/peg | Centralized custodian holds BTC 1:1 | BTC staked via Babylon; LBTC minted 1:1 as a liquid-staked token | Trust-minimized two-way peg (Stacks “Nakamoto”) |
| Maturity/liquidity | Most liquid, long track record | Early-stage, growing adoption via Sui/EVM DeFi | Early-stage, designed for stronger peg assurances |
| Privacy & settlement | ERC-20 on Ethereum; public settlement | BTC staking yield + standard ERC-20/Sui settlement (no CT) | Bitcoin-aligned settlement through Stacks design |
| Main Sui route today | Bridge WBTC → Sui | Bridge LBTC (via Lombard connectors) → Sui | Wrap sBTC → Sui (growing) |
| Primary risks | Custodian + bridge | Custody/consortium + staking (Babylon) + bridge | Design maturity + bridge |
What You Can Do With BTC on Sui Today
Bitcoin on Sui isn’t just about holding wrapped tokens, it’s about putting your BTC to work. With Sui’s low fees, fast finality, and growing app ecosystem, there are already several practical ways to earn yield, trade, and manage collateral.
Step-by-Step: Moving BTC Into Sui DeFi
Getting Bitcoin into Sui’s DeFi ecosystem follows a clear path.
BTCfi Risks on Sui: How to Protect Your Bitcoin with WBTC, L-BTC and sBTC
Like all of DeFi, BTCfi on Sui comes with risks. Understanding these risks and how to mitigate them is key before deploying large amounts of capital.
Peg/Issuer Risk:
Bridge/Interop Risk:
Protocol Risk:
Thompson highlights that regulatory clarity could actually accelerate BTCfi adoption: “LBTC and sBTC are well-positioned to benefit from clearer frameworks. Institutional investors want security, speed, and transparency, that’s exactly what Sui provides, making it a natural infrastructure layer for compliant, composable finance.”
Liquidity/Market Risk:
Other BTC Assets on Sui
Beyond WBTC, LBTC, and sBTC, several other Bitcoin-backed tokens are arriving on Sui:
Conclusion
BTCfi is reshaping Bitcoin’s role in the crypto economy, turning it from a passive store of value into an active, yield-bearing asset. On Sui, this transformation is amplified by fast finality, low fees, and an architecture built for scalability and composability.
Each wrapper, such as WBTC, LBTC, and sBTC, offers its own strengths and trade-offs. The key is not only choosing the model that fits your strategy but also managing risks through diversification and careful protocol selection. With Sui’s rapidly expanding DeFi stack, BTC holders now have the tools to trade, lend, borrow, and automate strategies with confidence.
As Thompson puts it, “BTCfi on Sui isn’t about choosing one wrapper, it’s about giving users options that align with their priorities. BTC has evolved from being a hold-only asset into one that can earn yield, secure protocols, and power new forms of DeFi. On Sui, it finally works for its holders.”