Nolus Protocol

Nolus Protocol is a Cosmos-native DeFi lease protocol that enables up to 3:1 leveraged asset acquisition through a non-custodial lease structure — where instead of receiving borrowed tokens directly, users receive the leveraged position as a “Lease” NFT object that holds the combined capital (user deposit + borrowed funds) in a non-liquidatable-until-threshold structure, reducing collateral requirements compared to standard overcollateralized loans.


Overview

Nolus launched on mainnet in 2023 as a Cosmos SDK blockchain designed around a novel DeFi primitive: the DeFi Lease. Traditional DeFi lending (Aave, NAVI, Mars) requires 150%+ collateralization because borrowed funds are liquid and can be withdrawn instantly. Nolus solves this by never giving borrowed tokens directly to the borrower — instead, the borrowed capital is deployed into a specific productive position (staking, LP, etc.) that the protocol controls until the lease is repaid. This allows lower collateral ratios (up to 3:1 leverage) because the protocol holds the underlying position, not the user. Nolus is conceptually similar to how traditional finance operates mortgages: you don’t receive mortgage cash, you receive property ownership tied to repayment.


The DeFi Lease Model

The model works as follows.

How It Works

  1. Choose a productive asset — e.g., stATOM (staked ATOM via Stride)
  2. Deposit initial collateral — e.g., 33 USDC (down payment, ~33% of total position)
  3. Protocol loans the remainder — e.g., 67 USDC worth of ATOM from Nolus’s liquidity pool
  4. Combined capital deployed — 100 USDC equivalent of ATOM is staked via Stride → stATOM created
  5. User holds a Lease — NFT representing ownership of 100 USDC worth of stATOM, with 67 USDC owed to protocol
  6. stATOM yield pays down the loan — staking rewards auto-repay outstanding balance over time
  7. Fully repaid → user owns 100% of stATOM — OR user can repay early and close the lease

Key Innovation: Protocol-Controlled Position

The borrowed capital never leaves the protocol’s custody until fully repaid:

  • No direct token withdrawal risk — the borrowed 67 USDC is deployed into stATOM, not given as cash
  • Lower LTV possible — protocol can safely lend more because it controls the collateral position directly
  • Auto-repayment model — productive positions (LSDs, LP) generate yield that chips away at principal

Supported Lease Strategies

Nolus starts with IBC-native yield strategies:

Liquid Staking Leases:

  • stATOM lease (deposit USDC → acquire stATOM position with leverage)
  • stOSMO lease (acquire leveraged Osmosis staking position)
  • Other Cosmos LSDs as added via governance

LP Leases (Planned):

  • Leveraged LP positions on Osmosis or Astroport
  • Protocol deploys into LP on behalf of lease holder
  • LP fees + trading yield helps repay principal

Liquidation Mechanics

While lower collateral than traditional lending, liquidation still applies:

  • If the Lease’s net equity (asset value – outstanding debt) falls below a liquidation threshold, the position is liquidated
  • Protocol sells enough of the underlying position to clear outstanding debt
  • Liquidation threshold is wider than traditional lending due to the position being productive (reducing principal over time)
  • Recovery threshold — before full liquidation, partial liquidation aims to restore health ratio

NLS Token

NLS is Nolus Protocol’s native token:

  • Staking — NLS staked to secure the Nolus blockchain (Tendermint PoS)
  • Governance — NLS holders vote on new lease strategy additions, LTV parameters, interest rate models, supported IBC asset additions
  • Fee revenue — Nolus earns interest on leases (the spread between deposit rate from LPs and the rate charged on leases); a portion of fees distributed to NLS stakers
  • Liquidity mining — NLS emissions reward early liquidity providers to Nolus’s lending pools

Lender Side: Providing Lease Capital

Nolus is two-sided:

  • Lessees — borrowers who open leveraged positions via leases
  • Lenders — deposit USDC (or supported stablecoins) into Nolus’s loan pool to earn interest from lessees’ lease repayments
  • Interest rate: dynamic, tracks utilization of the loan pool
  • Lenders take a small credit risk (in theory, if mass liquidations fail to recover principal)

Sources


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