Volo, the BTCFi and liquid staking hub on Sui Network backed by NAVI Protocol, OKX Ventures, Hashed, and DaoFive, is partnering with Dow Protocol and Dowsure to put e-commerce working capital financing on-chain. Dowsure brings institutional-grade underwriting, merchant risk analysis, repayment controls, and platform integrations built from years in the space. The yield this creates comes from real merchant lending activity, not from crypto trading fees or token emissions.
What Dowsure Actually Does
E-commerce merchants have a cash flow problem that most people outside the industry don’t think about. They buy inventory before they get paid for it.
On major platforms, that gap between spending and receiving can stretch for weeks. Working capital financing fills that gap, letting merchants buy stock and fulfill orders without sitting on their hands waiting for payment cycles to clear.
The risk analysis and underwriting that Dowsure has developed for this category are built around the specific data signals that e-commerce platforms provide: sales velocity, return rates, platform standing, and historical revenue patterns.
That data-driven underwriting approach, combined with repayment controls that connect directly to merchant payment flows on e-commerce platforms, creates a financing model with disciplined repayment mechanics that traditional collateral-based lending does not fully capture.
What Comes On-Chain Through This Partnership
Dow Protocol is an RWA platform that is bringing Dowsure’s prominent financing infrastructure on-chain. Volo provides the Sui-native yield and liquidity infrastructure that connects on-chain capital to the off-chain financing activity.
The result is a structure where DeFi participants on Sui can access yield generated by real e-commerce merchant lending rather than by crypto trading fees or token emissions.
That distinction matters for the real yield category specifically. Most yield in DeFi is circular: it comes from other DeFi participants paying to borrow or trade. Yield generated by merchant financing activity comes from outside the crypto ecosystem entirely, from the economic activity of e-commerce businesses that need working capital to operate.
That external source makes the yield genuinely uncorrelated with crypto market conditions in a way that most DeFi yield sources are not.
Why Sui Is the Right Place for This
Volo’s position as the BTCFi and LST hub on Sui, backed by institutional investors including OKX Ventures and Hashed, gives the partnership an established on-chain presence with existing liquidity infrastructure.
Bringing a new RWA yield category onto a network where liquidity and user activity are already developing creates better conditions for adoption than launching on a less active chain.
The partnership explicitly frames this as shaping a new category of real yield on Sui rather than simply adding another RWA product.
E-commerce merchant financing has characteristics that differ from the tokenized treasury products that have dominated the RWA conversation, and establishing it as a distinct category positions Sui as the home for a type of on-chain yield that doesn’t exist elsewhere in the ecosystem yet.
Future Outlook
Volo, Dow Protocol , and Dowsure are moving established e-commerce merchant financing infrastructure onto Sui’s blockchain for the first time. The yield comes from real merchant lending activity with institutional underwriting behind it, not from crypto-native fee structures.
For Sui’s DeFi ecosystem, this partnership opens a yield category that connects on-chain capital to the actual economic activity of global e-commerce merchants, which is a more durable foundation than most DeFi yield sources currently offer.