Learn

Everything you need to know about on-chain capital markets. From total beginner to professional trader.

Foundations

Start Here — What Is This All About?

Asset Classes

The Assets — What You Can Trade

How to Use Terminal One

Using Terminal One — Step by Step

Concepts

Key Concepts — Understanding How It Works

Glossary

Glossary — Every Term Defined

Beginner1 min read

DeFi (Decentralized Finance)

Financial services and products built on public blockchains, accessible to anyone with a wallet and without intermediaries like banks or brokers.

Beginner1 min read

RWA (Real-World Assets)

Physical or traditional financial assets that have been tokenized and brought on-chain. Examples include treasury bills, gold, real estate, and private credit.

Beginner1 min read

Tokenization

The process of representing ownership of a real-world asset as a digital token on a blockchain. The token provides a verifiable, transferable record of ownership.

Beginner1 min read

Wallet

A software application that stores private keys and allows users to interact with blockchains. Non-custodial wallets give users full control over their assets.

Beginner1 min read

Smart Contract

Self-executing code stored on a blockchain that automatically carries out agreed-upon terms when conditions are met. Used for everything from token swaps to lending protocols.

Beginner1 min read

Gas

The fee paid to blockchain validators for processing transactions. Paid in the native token of the chain (ETH on Ethereum, MATIC on Polygon).

Intermediate1 min read

Slippage

The difference between the expected price of a trade and the actual execution price. Higher slippage occurs in lower-liquidity markets. Terminal One minimizes slippage through cross-chain routing.

Beginner1 min read

Liquidity

The ease with which an asset can be bought or sold without significantly affecting its price. High liquidity means large orders can be filled with minimal slippage.

Beginner1 min read

DEX (Decentralized Exchange)

A trading platform that operates without a central authority. Users trade directly from their wallets using smart contracts. Examples: Uniswap, Curve.

Beginner1 min read

Yield

The return generated from holding an asset over time. In on-chain capital markets, yield comes from sources like Treasury bill interest, lending fees, or staking rewards.

Beginner1 min read

Custody

The holding of assets on behalf of someone else. Custodial platforms hold your assets for you. Non-custodial platforms (like Terminal One) let you hold your own assets.

Beginner1 min read

On-Chain

Data or transactions that are recorded directly on a blockchain. On-chain activity is transparent, permanent, and verifiable by anyone.

Beginner1 min read

Settlement

The finalization of a transaction — when ownership officially transfers. Traditional finance takes 1-3 days (T+1, T+2). On-chain settlement is instant and final.

Intermediate1 min read

AMM (Automated Market Maker)

A type of decentralized exchange that uses mathematical formulas to price assets instead of an order book. Liquidity is provided by users who earn fees in return.

Intermediate1 min read

TVL (Total Value Locked)

The total value of assets deposited in a DeFi protocol. A common metric for measuring the scale and adoption of a protocol.