Mezo Prime launches with Anchorage and Bullish to route institutional Bitcoin into segregated, qualifiedโcustody vaults that earn onchain yield and mint BTCโbacked MUSD.
Summary
- Mezo has launched Mezo Prime with Anchorage Digital Bank and Bullish to let corporate treasuries earn onchain BTC yield inside a qualifiedโcustody framework.
- The product uses segregated Enclave vaults at Anchorage, with no commingling or rehypothecation, allowing BTC to be locked as veBTC for protocol fees or used as collateral to borrow MUSD.
- Bullish is the first institutional customer and is deploying part of its treasury BTC into Mezo Prime, alongside a 250 BTC investment into Mezo itself.
Bitcoinโnative finance protocolย Mezoย has launched Mezo Prime, a new institutional product designed to give corporate treasuries and professional BTC holders access to onโchain yield and lending while remaining inside a qualifiedโcustody framework. The offering is built in partnership withย Anchorage Digital Bank N.A.ย and will go to market withย Bullishย (NYSE: BLSH) as its first institutional customer, alongside a 250 BTC investment into Mezo from the exchange operator.
Mezo Prime targets a growing pool of corporate and institutional Bitcoin that has so far remained largely idle. Publicly traded companies alone now hold more than 1 million BTC on their balance sheets, according to recent treasury data. โOver a million Bitcoin sits on corporate balance sheets today, and almost none of it is working,โ said Matt Luongo, coโfounder of Mezo and CEO of venture studioย Thesis, in prepared remarks. โMezo Prime changes that. Segregated custody through Anchorage Digital Bank, no rehypothecation, real yield from protocol activity.โ
Bitcoin-native thesis
At the core of the new product are Enclaves, segregated Bitcoin (BTC) vaults offered via Anchorage Digital Bank and exposed directly through the Anchorage platform to its existing institutional client base. Each Enclave is isolated per depositor, with no asset commingling and no rehypothecation, designed to meet higher standards for control, reporting and risk management than typical pooled yield products. BTC held in an Enclave can be locked as veBTC to earn protocol fees from Mezoโs Bitcoinโnative activity or used as collateral to borrow MUSD, Mezoโs 100% Bitcoinโbacked stablecoin.
โInstitutions want to do more with their Bitcoin, but not at the expense of security and control. Mezo Prime delivers both secure, segregated custody and direct access to onchain yield in one platform,โ said Nathan McCauley, coโfounder and CEO of Anchorage Digital, as the bank moves to expand its range of yieldโgenerating options for clients. The product is available immediately to Anchorage Digital Bank clients via the bankโs existing interface.
Bullish, the institutionally focused digital asset platform and parent company of CoinDesk, will be the first institution to participate in the Mezo Prime Bitcoin yield product through its corporate treasury. A portion of Bullishโs BTC holdings will be deployed into Enclaves on Mezo while remaining inside Anchorage Digitalโs custody and compliance stack, with a 250 BTC investment into Mezo coinciding with the launch. โBullish was built on the belief that institutional standards and digital asset participation arenโt in conflict, and weโre delighted to work with Mezo as a launch customer,โ said Tarun Kapoor, vice president at Bullish. โTheir veBTC design is a great example of that philosophy in practice โ mitigating smart contract risk and keeping the underlying BTC secure.โ
Todayโs launch builds on Mezoโs broader push to create aย Bitcoinโnative DeFi stackย that includes fixedโrate BTCโbacked loans, the MUSD stablecoin and BTCโdenominated protocol fees, as well as earlier integrations such asย support via Anchorageโs selfโcustody wallet Portoย and multichain connectivity throughย Wormhole. With corporate treasuries continuing to accumulate Bitcoin as a reserve asset, products like Mezo Prime illustrate how yieldโbearing, onโchain strategies are increasingly being adapted to institutional constraints rather than asking institutions to bend to DeFiโs.