Project 0 Forges DeFi’s Unified Margin Layer in Game-Changing Kamino Partnership

DeFi's fragmented collateral problem just met its match.
The Margin Revolution Begins
Project 0 shatters traditional margin barriers by creating a unified layer that spans multiple protocols. No more siloed collateral—just seamless cross-platform leverage that actually makes sense.
Kamino Integration Changes Everything
This partnership isn't just another handshake deal. Kamino's infrastructure merges with Project 0's architecture to create something Wall Street would kill for—if they understood it. The result? Margin efficiency that cuts through DeFi's complexity like a hot knife through butter.
Why This Matters Now
While traditional finance still struggles with legacy systems, DeFi just bypassed decades of bureaucratic buildup. One unified margin layer means your collateral works harder across every protocol—no more trapped liquidity or missed opportunities.
Finance purists might call it reckless. We call it progress. After all, what's more cynical than watching traditional institutions charge fees for moving money between their own internal silos?
A single credit pool linking venues and strategies
The integration between Project 0 and Kamino creates a single margin environment that allows traders to move credit fluidly between both venues. Rather than locking collateral separately on each platform, users can now deploy the same pool of assets to borrow, lend, or hedge wherever rates are most favorable.
This means a trader can open a position on Kamino, identify a yield or borrowing opportunity on Project 0, and arbitrage between them using the same underlying credit, all without unwinding or duplicating collateral.
For active participants in decentralized markets, that shift allows risk and leverage to be managed in aggregate, reducing liquidation risk and freeing up idle assets for more productive use.
Access to this new system is being rolled out methodically. Starting today, Project 0’s top 5,000 users will serve as the initial test group, putting the cross-margin functionality through its paces and providing feedback. A phased public rollout is expected within three to five days, allowing developers to monitor performance and user experience before expanding access to the wider community.