WHO HANDLES WHAT: Digital Wealth Partners is our affiliated registered investment advisor. DWP provides investment advice on income-generating strategies, Portfolio construction, and derivatives usage. Digital Ascension Group handles the administrative coordination, Custody relationships, and transaction documentation.
The Problem with Selling #
You need $10k per month to cover expenses. You’ve got $2M in crypto that’s appreciated significantly. Selling seems obvious, but it creates problems.
Every sale triggers Capital Gains tax. If you bought Bitcoin at $15k and it’s now $95k, selling creates an 80% taxable gain. Your $10k lifestyle need becomes a $15k+ withdrawal after taxes.
Selling also reduces your position. If Bitcoin goes to $150k next year, you’ve given up that upside on everything you sold. The opportunity cost compounds over time.
And timing matters. Selling in a drawdown locks in losses. Selling at peaks means you might miss continued appreciation. You’re constantly making market timing decisions just to fund living expenses.
Staking for Passive Income #
Some cryptocurrencies pay you to hold them. You lock tokens to help secure the Blockchain network, and you earn Staking rewards.
Ethereum Staking: Currently yields around 3-4% annually. You stake ETH, earn more ETH. The rewards compound if you restake them.
Solana Staking: Runs 6-8% depending on the Validator. Higher Yield, but Solana is more volatile than Ethereum.
Other proof-of-stake chains: Cardano, Polkadot, Cosmos, and others offer Staking. Yields vary from 5-15%, but so does risk.
The mechanics are straightforward. You delegate tokens to a Validator (or run your own Validator if you have technical capability). The Validator does the work. You earn a share of network rewards.
Staking rewards are taxable as ordinary income when you receive them. The value at receipt becomes your cost basis. When you later sell staked rewards, you calculate Capital Gains from that basis.
Lock-up periods vary. Ethereum has no fixed lock-up post-Shanghai, but some platforms impose their own restrictions. Other chains might lock tokens for weeks or months. Make sure you can access funds when needed.
Validator risk is real. If your Validator misbehaves or goes offline, you could lose a portion of staked tokens through “slashing.” Pick reputable validators with good uptime history.
Covered Calls on Bitcoin and Ethereum #
You own Bitcoin or Ethereum. You sell call Options against your holdings. Someone pays you a premium for the right to buy your crypto at a set price by a certain date.
Example: You own 10 ETH at $3,500 each. You sell a 30-day call option at a $4,000 strike price. Someone pays you $200 per ETH ($2,000 total premium) for that right.
If ETH stays below $4,000 for 30 days, the option expires worthless. You keep your ETH and the $2,000 premium. You can sell another call for next month.
If ETH goes above $4,000, your ETH gets called away at $4,000. You still keep the $2,000 premium, and you made $500 per ETH in price appreciation ($3,500 to $4,000). But you miss out on gains above $4,000.
This strategy caps your upside in Exchange for monthly premium income. It works when you think crypto will trade sideways or up modestly. It doesn’t work if you expect explosive upside moves.
The tax treatment is complicated. Premium received is generally income when the option expires or gets exercised. If your crypto gets called away, that’s a taxable sale. Work with a tax advisor who understands option taxation.
Covered calls require proper platforms. Deribit and other crypto option exchanges offer this, but you need to understand Margin requirements, Settlement mechanics, and Counterparty Risk.
Collateralized Loans for Liquidity #
You pledge crypto as Collateral. A lender gives you cash or stablecoins. You use the loan proceeds for expenses. Your crypto stays intact.
This is the same structure discussed in the Real Estate loan article, but used for lifestyle Liquidity instead of property purchases.
Typical terms: 40-60% LTV, 8-15% interest rates, 6-12 month terms. You make interest-only payments and either refinance or pay off the principal at maturity.
Why this works for income: You borrow $200k against $500k in Bitcoin. Use the $200k for living expenses over two years. Your Bitcoin stays invested. If Bitcoin appreciates, you’ve maintained full exposure while funding your lifestyle.
The risk: Bitcoin drops and you face a Margin call. You either add Collateral or the lender liquidates some of your position. This is a real risk in volatile markets.
Tax advantage: Taking a loan isn’t taxable. You’re not selling anything. The interest you pay generally isn’t deductible (unless the loan proceeds fund investment activity), but you’ve deferred Capital Gains tax potentially indefinitely.
Some people use this strategy indefinitely. Borrow against crypto, make interest payments from Staking or other income sources, refinance when the loan matures. As long as crypto appreciates faster than the Interest Rate, it works.
Crypto Lending and DeFi Yield #
You can earn interest by lending crypto through platforms or DeFi protocols.
Centralized lending platforms: Platforms like BlockFi and Celsius used to offer 4-8% on Bitcoin and Ethereum deposits. Many have shut down or faced issues. The ones still operating offer lower rates and come with platform risk.
DeFi lending protocols: Aave, Compound, and similar protocols let you deposit crypto to earn interest. Rates fluctuate based on supply and demand. You might earn 2-6% on stablecoins, less on volatile assets.
The mechanics: You deposit crypto into a Smart Contract. Borrowers pay interest to borrow your assets. You earn a share of that interest. You can withdraw anytime (in theory, assuming there’s Liquidity).
The risks: Smart Contract bugs could drain your funds. Protocol exploits happen. Market crashes can create Liquidity crunches where you can’t withdraw. Platform insolvency is possible with centralized lenders.
For income purposes, this is riskier than Staking. The yields need to compensate for the additional risk. Many investors use this for Stablecoin positions rather than volatile crypto.
Liquidity Pool Participation #
You provide Liquidity to decentralized exchanges. You earn trading fees from people swapping tokens.
How it works: You deposit two tokens (like ETH and USDC) into a Liquidity pool. Traders swap between them. You earn a percentage of each swap fee. Your share of fees depends on your portion of the total pool.
Returns: Highly variable. Popular pools with high volume can generate 5-20% annual yields from fees. Low-volume pools might generate almost nothing.
Impermanent Loss: This is the killer. If the price ratio between your two tokens changes significantly, you end up with less value than if you’d just held the tokens. The fee income needs to exceed Impermanent Loss for this to make sense.
Complexity: You’re tracking LP Token positions, calculating Impermanent Loss, dealing with multiple tokens, and filing taxes on a complicated arrangement. This isn’t passive income.
For most people seeking monthly income, Liquidity pools are more trouble than they’re worth unless you’re very active in DeFi and understand the mechanics deeply.
Building a Monthly Income Portfolio #
Here’s how to actually structure this:
Step 1: Determine your monthly need. How much cash do you need? $5k? $10k? $20k? Be specific.
Step 2: Calculate required crypto holdings. Working backwards, if you need $120k annually and expect to generate 6% Yield, you need $2M in crypto positions.
Step 3: Allocate across strategies. Don’t put everything in one approach.
Example allocation for someone needing $10k monthly:
- $800k staked Ethereum (3.5% Yield = $28k annually)
- $600k Bitcoin with monthly covered calls (4% additional Yield = $24k annually)
- $400k in stablecoins earning DeFi Yield (5% = $20k annually)
- $200k reserve for collateralized borrowing when needed
Total: $2M generating roughly $72k annually in various income streams, plus access to borrowing against the full position.
Step 4: Build cash buffer. Keep 6-12 months expenses in stablecoins or cash. Market Volatility will disrupt income streams. You need reserves.
Step 5: Monitor and adjust. Yields change. Staking rates fluctuate. Option premiums vary with Volatility. Review monthly and adjust strategy.
Tax Planning for Crypto Income #
Every income strategy has different tax treatment:
Staking rewards: Ordinary income at fair market value when received. Cost basis = value at receipt.
Covered call premiums: Income when the option expires or gets exercised. Can be ordinary or capital depending on holding period and circumstances.
Loan proceeds: Not taxable. But if Collateral gets liquidated, that’s a taxable sale.
DeFi Yield: Ordinary income when received, though the IRS hasn’t issued complete guidance on all DeFi mechanics.
LP fees: Ordinary income as earned, though tracking this is difficult. Some people report only when they withdraw from pools.
You need to track all of this. DWP coordinates with tax professionals to make sure income strategies don’t create tax nightmares. Getting the tax treatment wrong can turn a 6% Yield into a 2% after-tax Yield once you account for errors and penalties.
Risk Management #
Every income strategy carries risks:
Staking: Validator slashing, Token price decline, lock-up periods preventing access.
Covered calls: Capping upside in bull markets, tax complexity, platform Counterparty Risk.
Collateralized loans: Margin calls, liquidation, accumulating interest debt.
DeFi lending: Smart Contract risk, platform insolvency, Liquidity crunches.
Liquidity pools: Impermanent Loss, Smart Contract risk, Token price crashes.
The goal is to Spread risk across multiple strategies so no single point of failure destroys your income stream.
Never put your entire position into high-risk DeFi protocols. Keep core holdings in safer strategies like Staking major tokens. Use riskier approaches for smaller portions of the Portfolio.
Maintain reserves. If half your income streams shut down tomorrow (platform bankruptcy, market crash, whatever), can you survive for 6-12 months? If not, you’re over-extended.
What Digital Wealth Partners Actually Does #
DWP is a registered investment advisor providing investment advice on income strategies:
Portfolio construction: They analyze your total crypto holdings, income needs, and risk tolerance to build an allocation across Staking, Options, lending, and other strategies.
Strategy implementation: They advise on which validators to use, which option strikes to sell, which DeFi protocols are appropriate, and how much to borrow.
Ongoing management: Markets change. Yields fluctuate. Opportunities appear and disappear. DWP monitors positions and recommends adjustments.
Tax coordination: They work with your tax advisor to structure income strategies tax-efficiently and ensure proper reporting.
Risk monitoring: They track Validator performance, monitor loan LTV ratios, watch DeFi Protocol health, and alert you to issues.
Digital Ascension Group handles the administrative execution: setting up Custody arrangements, coordinating with platforms and validators, maintaining documentation, tracking positions.
When Income Strategies Don’t Work #
Skip income-generation strategies if:
Your crypto position is too small. If you’ve got $100k in crypto and need $5k monthly income, the math doesn’t work. You’d need 60% annual Yield, which only exists in scams or extremely high-risk protocols.
You can’t handle Volatility. Income strategies don’t eliminate crypto Volatility. Your $2M Portfolio generating $10k monthly could drop to $1M in a crash. Can you handle seeing that while maintaining the strategy?
You need guaranteed income. Nothing about crypto income is guaranteed. Staking yields change. Options expire worthless some months. DeFi protocols collapse. If you need certainty, use traditional fixed income.
You don’t understand the mechanics. If covered calls confuse you or DeFi protocols seem like black boxes, don’t use them for income. Complexity you don’t understand will eventually hurt you.
Alternative: Just Sell Strategically #
Sometimes selling is actually the right answer:
Tax-loss harvest while selling. If you have positions with losses, sell those first to offset gains from selling appreciated assets.
Sell in low-income years. If you have a year with lower income (sabbatical, business loss, whatever), realized Capital Gains might face a lower tax rate.
Gift to charity. Donate appreciated crypto to charity, take the tax deduction, avoid Capital Gains tax entirely.
Use qualified small business stock exemption. If applicable, certain Token sales might qualify for preferential treatment.
Sometimes paying 20% Capital Gains tax and having clean, simple cash flow beats managing complex income strategies that might Yield only slightly better after-tax returns.
Setting This Up #
If you want to generate crypto income without selling:
Document current holdings. What do you own? What’s your cost basis? What’s the current value?
Calculate income requirement. How much monthly cash do you actually need?
Assess risk tolerance. Can you handle Margin calls? Are you comfortable with DeFi protocols? Do you understand Options?
Evaluate strategies. Which income approaches fit your situation and risk tolerance?
Connect with DWP. They’ll build a specific allocation and implementation plan based on your circumstances.
For questions about generating income from crypto holdings, contact Digital Wealth Partners at www.digitalwealthpartners.net.