Cardano has launched Cardinal, a pivotal protocol aiming to bridge Bitcoin's vast liquidity with Cardano's decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystem.
This initiative, highlighted by Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson and IOG CTO Roman Pellerin, marks their most direct effort yet to integrate Bitcoin.
While already capable of wrapping and unwrapping Ordinals, Pellerin notes the protocol isn’t “production-ready” yet, with improvements planned for the 1.0 version.
Cardinal lets Bitcoin holders access DeFi services like lending and borrowing on Cardano without relying on centralized bridges.
It achieves this by securely “wrapping” Bitcoin’s UTXOs into tokens with a one-to-one peg, allowing full redeemability.
The protocol employs a trust-minimized model and MuSig2 for enhanced security, ensuring decentralization and safeguarding against chain reorganizations.
Furthermore, Cardinal integrates BitVMX, an off-chain computation system, for efficient and programmable interactions between the two blockchains. This move by Cardano promises to open up significant new opportunities for both Bitcoin and the broader DeFi landscape.
As Bitcoin continues its steady ascent in 2025, comparisons with the world’s largest assets are once again gaining traction.
Bitcoin is treading water near the $120,000 resistance, with persistent bids around $116,000 offering a firm base—but failing to ignite fresh upside momentum.
Michael Saylor, executive chairman of Strategy, has revealed that the company has acquired an additional 21,021 Bitcoin for approximately $2.46 billion, paying an average price of $117,256 per BTC.
As Bitcoin continues to consolidate above $100K, a critical market signal is flashing: BTC funding rates remain elevated, even as price action cools.