Dasar
Spot
Perdagangkan kripto dengan bebas
Perdagangan Margin
Perbesar keuntungan Anda dengan leverage
Konversi & Investasi Otomatis
0 Fees
Perdagangkan dalam ukuran berapa pun tanpa biaya dan tanpa slippage
ETF
Dapatkan eksposur ke posisi leverage dengan mudah
Perdagangan Pre-Market
Perdagangkan token baru sebelum listing
Futures
Akses ribuan kontrak perpetual
TradFi
Emas
Satu platform aset tradisional global
Opsi
Hot
Perdagangkan Opsi Vanilla ala Eropa
Akun Terpadu
Memaksimalkan efisiensi modal Anda
Perdagangan Demo
Futures Kickoff
Bersiap untuk perdagangan futures Anda
Acara Futures
Gabung acara & dapatkan hadiah
Perdagangan Demo
Gunakan dana virtual untuk merasakan perdagangan bebas risiko
Peluncuran
CandyDrop
Koleksi permen untuk mendapatkan airdrop
Launchpool
Staking cepat, dapatkan token baru yang potensial
HODLer Airdrop
Pegang GT dan dapatkan airdrop besar secara gratis
Launchpad
Jadi yang pertama untuk proyek token besar berikutnya
Poin Alpha
Perdagangkan aset on-chain, raih airdrop
Poin Futures
Dapatkan poin futures dan klaim hadiah airdrop
Investasi
Simple Earn
Dapatkan bunga dengan token yang menganggur
Investasi Otomatis
Investasi otomatis secara teratur
Investasi Ganda
Keuntungan dari volatilitas pasar
Soft Staking
Dapatkan hadiah dengan staking fleksibel
Pinjaman Kripto
0 Fees
Menjaminkan satu kripto untuk meminjam kripto lainnya
Pusat Peminjaman
Hub Peminjaman Terpadu
Private credit firms are chasing bigger slices of Wall Street's leveraged debt market, but there's a catch nobody's talking about quietly enough. The more aggressive they push into this territory, the more they're stripping away the very safeguards that used to shield them when markets turned south.
It's the classic risk-reward tradeoff playing out in real time. These shops are hungry for returns, right? Higher leverage, fatter premiums—it all sounds good on a spreadsheet. But peel back the layers and you'll see portfolios getting thinner on protections. Covenants loosening. Due diligence getting streamlined. The kind of corners that seemed fine during a bull run suddenly look terrifying when credit cycles turn.
Wall Street's been consolidating this business for years, and now private credit is muscling in hard. The problem isn't that they're entering the market—it's that they're entering on terms that leave them exposed. When an economic slowdown hits, these structural vulnerabilities won't matter much. What matters is whether the buffer exists to absorb the shock. Right now, that buffer is shrinking by the deal.