
DGUSER-ROLEX
2025/11/12 05:47
Here are the main product types and how they work:
• Simple / Savings (Flexible & Fixed)
Flexible Savings: You deposit crypto (or stablecoins) and you can redeem at any time. Interest (APR) accrues daily.
Fixed Savings: You lock your assets for a defined term (7, 14, 30, 60 days etc) and get a higher APR in exchange for committing the assets.
How profit is calculated: For Fixed, the formula is:
Total Interest = Subscription Amount × APR × Lock-up Days ÷ 365
Example: 1,000 USDT, APR 8%, 30 days → ~6.57 USDT at end of term.
Key features: Flexible has lower yield but more access, Fixed gives higher yield but less liquidity.
• On-chain Earn / Staking
This is where you stake Proof-of-Stake (PoS) assets through Bitget (they handle the validator work) and you earn rewards.
You deposit your crypto, interest/accrual begins (usually from day after deposit) and you earn daily.
Redemption: Standard (after network unstaking period) or Express (often with a fee) in many cases.
APR depends on network rewards, amount staked, network conditions. It’s not fixed in many cases.
• Structured/Advanced Products (Dual Investment, Shark Fin, Smart Trend)
These are higher-potential-yield but also higher complexity / conditional return products:
Shark Fin: Principal-protected (you get your principal back) but yield depends on underlying asset’s price staying within a defined range.
Dual Investment: You commit assets (stablecoin or crypto) based on a target strike price; in one outcome you earn interest + maybe get converted asset. If price moves differently you still get principal back but maybe lower yield.
These products can offer much higher APRs but they come with additional conditions and risk of “less optimal” outcome (though often principal is returned).
On the main Earn page, you’ll see various APRs for different assets/products. For example: USDT “1.06% ~ 606.49%” (that high number probably comes from very conditional structured product)
In simpler products: Example from Fixed Savings: If you lock 1,000 USDT at 8% APR for 30 days you get ~6.57 USDT. (As shown above)
For On-chain staking: Rewards depend on token, network, lock-up. Eg: article references ~15% APR for a token in one example
Given your interest in cryptocurrencies, swing trades, tokens, etc., these are especially important:
Principal risk: Some products guarantee principal (e.g., Fixed Savings, some Structured ones) but crypto market volatility still affects value of locked asset. For example, if you lock token A for yield, if token A’s price drops 50%, you still get interest but you’re down on asset value.
Liquidity / lock-up periods: Fixed-term products won’t let you withdraw until the term ends (or if you do redeem early you may face penalty)
APR fluctuations: Especially for On-chain staking, rewards can change depending on network conditions.
Conditional yield in structured products: e.g., for Shark Fin or Dual Investment the high yield often assumes certain price behaviour of the underlying asset. If the asset moves outside that range you might get the lower bound APR.
Hidden fees or redemption conditions: e.g., express unstaking may incur fee. On On-chain Earn, express redemption may cost 10% of return in one example.
Token risk: If you’re using smaller tokens (e.g., your interest-token is a lesser known crypto), you may be exposed to liquidity, listing/delisting risk.
Platform risk: While Bitget is a major platform, crypto platforms carry risk (regulatory, security, custody) — always good to understand how your assets are held, whether you maintain control, etc
Since you’re trading tokens (e.g., ADA, NERO, SUL, etc.) with a mix of long-term and swing moves, here are some thoughts:
Use Flexible Savings for idle holdings you intend to hold for a while and might need liquidity (e.g., stablecoins or tokens you don’t plan to move soon) → you earn some yield while holding.
Use Fixed Savings for assets you are confident in and can lock up (e.g., stablecoins or perhaps ADA if you see long-term hold) → higher yield.
For your active tokens (ADA, NERO, etc) that you might trade or swing: you might be less likely to put them in long lock-up unless you’re comfortable with being out of the market for that period.
For On-chain staking: If you hold tokens that support staking (e.g., ADA supports staking), you could stake through Bitget if the APR is attractive — but verify the token is available, what lock-up/unlock terms are, and how that fits your trading plan.
Regarding structured products: These could be interesting but only if you fully understand the conditions. For tokens you believe strongly in (e.g., big potential up-move) a structured product like dual investment might enhance yield, but they come with extra complexity.
Always factor in token price risk: Even if you get yield, if the token falls significantly you might be worse off if you locked up. If you value flexibility (for swing trades) you may lean to more flexible yield products.
Let’s say you hold 500 ADA and you expect to hold it long-term, but you also might want flexibility for when market moves. Suppose Bitget offers a Flexible Savings for ADA at APR = 5% (just hypothetical).
Daily yield = 500 ADA × 5% ÷ 365 ≈ 0.0685 ADA/day.
Over 30 days that’s ~2.055 ADA extra.
If ADA goes up in value you benefit doubly (price + yield). If ADA falls, you still get the yield but you're holding a depreciated asset. If you locked it up in Fixed at say 8% for 30 days, yield is higher but you can’t redeem early