Frank | Harmonix Fi@frank_harmonix
I’ve been spending the last few months on one problem:
How do we let people sit in stables, earn real yield, still have a shot at 5–10x upside in HAR – and at the same time use that flow to quietly accumulate HYPE and pay sustainable yield back to long-term holders?
What comes out of that is a convertible model that sits between a bond, an option and a flywheel.
If you come in with $USDC or $USDH, you don’t need to think about “structured products”.
You choose a simple term – short, medium, or longer – and deposit into a Convertible Stable Vault. In return you receive a receipt token that represents:
1. your stable balance,
2. the yield Harmonix earns for you,
3. and a private entry level into HAR, fixed at the moment you deposit.
From your perspective it’s just:
“I parked stables, I’m earning, and somewhere in the background I’ve locked a ticket into HAR at today’s level.”
Time does the work.
While you hold the receipt token, the system routes liquidity through Harmonix’s strategy engine and keeps track of what matters on HyperEVM and HIP-3. Your position grows. You don’t have to manage anything – no leverage sliders, no farming meta, just a balance that moves.
The interesting part is the decision you face later.
At any point near or at the end of your term you compare one simple thing:
- HAR now vs. the entry level you locked when you deposited.
If HAR has rerated meaningfully above your entry, you can exercise your right and rotate your position into HAR at that level, then decide what to do with it on the market.
If HAR hasn’t moved enough, you simply take back your stables plus the yield and points you accumulated along the way.
In other words:
- default path: capital-protected stable yield,
- optional path: convert that same deposit into a high-beta HAR position if the thesis plays out.
You are never forced into HAR. You only cross that bridge if you want the upside.
This is where the flywheel starts turning.
Harmonix only truly “keeps” your stablecoins when you choose HAR.
If you walk away in stables, they come back to you with yield.
If you break early, you still get most of them back, with a small penalty for cutting the agreement short.
But when you do press the button and take HAR, the stables behind your receipt token stay inside the protocol. They become long-term fuel for Harmonix to grow a strategic position in HYPE and route it through our own playbook on Hyperliquid / HyperEVM.
A share of what that engine produces – together with the early-exit penalties – flows back to people who stake HAR and lock into xHAR. So the more often stable users choose HAR over cash, the larger the pile of working capital behind the protocol, and the stronger the yield stream to long-term holders.
From a HAR holder’s perspective it’s very simple:
“When others come in for conservative stable yield and eventually rotate into HAR, the protocol gets stronger and my staked HAR earns more.”
You’re not being paid with empty emissions. You’re plugged into the cash flow of people voluntarily moving from stables → HAR and the activity Harmonix can generate with that base.
That loop is what matters to me.
1. Stables enter for conservative yield, with a built-in right to take HAR at today’s level.
2. A share of those depositors eventually choose upside and convert into HAR.
3. Their stables stay in the system and power Harmonix’s strategy engine to build and work a HYPE position.
4. The results flow back to xHAR stakers and long-term HAR holders.
5. Stronger yield and a deeper HYPE reserve make HAR more attractive to hold – and more attractive to receive through future convertible deposits.
That, in turn, pulls in the next wave of stable deposits.
From the outside, it looks like a simple choice on a front end. Underneath, it’s a coordinated flywheel between stables, HAR and HYPE that I don’t see anywhere else right now.
Early cohorts will be the ones who lock their entry levels and define the benchmarks everyone compares against later.