It's not so much about why these are useful to spammers, but why they are a problem for us. Obfuscated links cannot be searched by moderators or normal users, so we can't find other instances of spam easily or determine patterns among spammers once a single spam post has been identified. They force reviewers and moderators to take a risk in verifying the destination address.
I'll give you one example that prompted my feature request. There is a persistent spam group that has been dumping links to a product called SQLYog on the site for years. They have created dozens of accounts to do this. For years, their spam linked back to their website, so as soon as one was detected, we could run a URL search and find the others that terrible reviewers approved (thankfully, the review audits have reduced the frequency at which their spam is being approved). They recognized this, and started obfuscating some of their links. Now they only post obfuscated links. This means that we cannot search for their product URLs directly anymore. Some reviewers are still approving their spam.
Outside of spam, another case is discussed in my answer here. A user trolled the site by injecting porn site links using shortened URLs in edits like this that reviewers approved. Had the reviewers seen the target URL in the markdown, they probably would not have.
I recognize that motivated trolls will still find a way to hide their links, but we've found most spammers are pretty lazy. If we can make it just a little harder for them to take advantage of the community, I think it will help us all out.
http://somephishingsite.nasty
take you? Now how abouthttp://link.ly/xyz
?