Maple Finance CEO Sidney Powell on Building the DeFi-Bond Bridge

Maple Finance is quietly becoming one of the most important bridges between decentralized finance (DeFi) and traditional finance.

Co-founded by Sidney Powell in 2021, the institutional crypto lending platform has facilitated over $5 billion in loans and is increasingly positioning itself as the infrastructure layer for tokenized private credit — a sector TradFi is rapidly embracing.

After a turbulent few years for crypto credit markets, Maple has staged an impressive comeback. In 2024, its total value locked surged over 580%, driven by new products like SyrupUSDC — a permissionless yield offering blocked to U.S. users but aimed at global DeFi protocols. Its TVL that year went from around $44 million to over $300 million.Sidney Powell is a speaker at the Consensus 2025 Open Money Summit on May 14.

Powell points to Maple’s custodian integrations, native BTC support, and low counterparty risk as key advantages for institutions seeking yield in a post-FTX landscape.

At the same time, Maple has aligned its governance and incentives around a single token, SYRUP, migrating away from the older NPL model. With no equity holders behind the scenes, Powell argues that SYRUP is the only capital structure needed — a design that sidesteps the misaligned incentives that have plagued other token projects.

Ahead of Consensus 2025 , Maple is expanding its footprint in Asia and Latin America, launching a bitcoin liquid staking token, and betting big on the continued rise of institutional DeFi.

Powell, an Australian fintech entrepreneur who started his career in traditional finance at National Australia Bank in Melbourne, sat down with CoinDesk to talk about what’s next. This Q&A was edited for clarity and brevity.

CoinDesk: Maple’s growth in 2024 has been impressive. What’s driving it, and how are you positioning Maple differently from other DeFi lenders?

Powell : A lot of the growth in Q2 came from our ability to accept a wider range of collateral — for example, SOL, not just BTC. That opened us up for more bespoke types of loans for our institutional borrowers who accepted SOL as collateral instead of just BTC and ETH.

That gave us a broader set of customers. But from Q3 onward, the real driver was the launch of SyrupUSDC — a permissionless version of the product geared towards DeFi, though blocked in the U.S., it offers the same yield from institutional loans under the hood. We also formed partnerships with Pendle, Morpho, and Sky.

Having that DeFi access point, the ability for protocols to integrate us, was a really good source of growth. The other thing is: borrowers like our product. They can post native BTC without smart contracts and face less counterparty risk.

OK