What Do I Earn If I Lend $APU?

The long-tail of crypto has long since been cut off from the P2P lending market, but Teller is putting a stop to this. Although coins like $APU have historically been about memes, culture, and community, new opportunities in areas like lending have officially arrived.
Yes, $APU hodlers can now supply their idle tokens into a Teller liquidity pool—unlocking a new way to earn fixed, time-based yield without needing to sell or stake in volatile farms.
While most lending platforms only support majors like ETH or USDC, Teller’s isolated, overcollateralized lending pools make it possible to lend niche assets like $APU directly—and earn when borrowers repay.
What Is $APU?
Apu Apustaja (APU) is a meme-driven cryptocurrency inspired by the iconic frog known as “Helper.” Apu represents kindness, softness, and “frenship” in its purest internet form. Have to admit, that’s lowkey endearing…but that’s not why we’re here—lenders can also profit on that compassion.
Built on Ethereum, $APU captures a strong community spirit and meme appeal—not utility, not enterprise adoption, just pure vibes. With a total supply of 340 billion and a market cap hovering around $50M, $APU has become a symbol of love, support, and “I’m here for you, fren.” Now, that same energy can be used as collateral to unlock stablecoin liquidity through Teller.
How Lending $APU Works
Teller uses a peer-to-peer, permissionless lending model designed to support long-tail tokens like $APU.
- Lenders deposit $APU into the lending pool
- Borrowers post collateral (e.g., WETH) and borrow $APU
- Loans are time-based: 1, 3, 7, or 30 days
- Once repaid, lenders receive their $APU plus fixed interest
- If the borrower defaults, the lender can claim the posted collateral
Got Questions?
What happens if a borrower doesn’t repay? The lender has the right to claim the borrower’s collateral. Since loans are overcollateralized, the lender is protected, and the borrower risks losing their assets.
How long do loans last? Loans typically last 1, 3, 7, or 30 days. Borrowers can roll them over if pool liquidity allows.
Is impermanent loss a risk? Nope. IL only applies to AMMs and LPs. Lenders on Teller deposit a single asset ($APU) and earn yield through interest, not rebalancing.
When can lenders withdraw? Once a loan is repaid or matures, lenders can withdraw their principal and interest directly from the Teller dashboard.
What’s the Yield?
Yield on Teller is fixed and comes straight from borrower interest—not token emissions, not liquidity farming.
Depending on demand and loan activity, APRs for $APU lenders have recently ranged between 25% and 60%, paid directly in $APU.
Returns are predictable, transparent, and secured by overcollateralized borrowers.
Why Lend $APU on Teller?
- Frenship meets fixed income: earn while holding a memecoin that matters
- No emissions: yield is paid by borrowers, not inflation
- Overcollateralized & time-based: no auto-liquidations
- No LP or staking risk: just lend and earn
- Passive exposure: set it and let it work
Put $APU to Work
Lend $APU into a Teller pool and earn fixed-rate returns while supporting a decentralized future powered by community tokens.
🌲 https://defi.teller.org/pool/0x060acddbf520c887e7db349f56ee7bfd0b4ab7c2