(Bloomberg) — The last major bear market nearly wiped out the entire crypto-lending industry. Now, it’s staging a major comeback, with a new breed of creditors looking to step into the void and satisfy the market’s perennial appetite for debt.

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Lenders ranging from traditional banks to crypto native firms have either begun or are in the process of providing capital, facilitating an uptick in a range of market activities from amplifying bets with leverage to providing short-term liquidity needed for trading.

This month alone, Cantor Fitzgerald, the financial-services firm previously led by US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, kicked off its global Bitcoin financing business with initial capital of $2 billion. Meanwhile, Bitcoin software firm Blockstream Corp. secured a multi-billion dollar investment in its crypto lending funds. And crypto wealth manager Xapo Bank began offering Bitcoin-backed loans up to $1 million.

“The new lenders will be much more institutional in nature,” said David Mercer, chief executive of the institutional trading platform LMAX Group. “More banks will enter the space and provide credit mechanisms to some of the largest institutions you can imagine to trade these assets.”

Crypto lending surged in the lead up to the market bull run in 2021, with the rise of native lenders such as Genesis Global Capital, Celsius Network and BlockFi. Those firms ended up underwriting unsecured loans to hedge funds or exchanges that blew up, due in part to a plunge in crypto prices. All three subsequently filed for bankruptcy, leaving traders, prime brokers and market makers with much less liquidity and access to the capital markets.

Risk-Management Challenges

“There haven’t been a lot of people willing to give leverage, all the undercollateralized lending went away,” said Rob Hadick, general partner at crypto venture firm Dragonfly. “There are not many people, if anyone, that are good at understanding how to risk-manage crypto. It has been quite a bit of an issue for a lot of people.”

Crypto exchanges, prime brokers and market makers sought to help fill the void in the absence of industry-native lenders and traditional financial institutions that were willing to lend to crypto firms, in part because of the crackdown on the sector during the Biden administration.