Tokenization of Real-World Assets Gains Momentum
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, has pushed further into tokenized funds. Its BUIDL fund has surpassed $2 billion. Nasdaq has filed with the SEC to trade tokenized securities. Companies like Stripe and Robinhood are also building blockchain solutions.
The debate is no longer about whether capital markets will move on-chain, but how. Flawed infrastructure could derail tokenization’s promise. With over 50 Layer-2s and fragile bridges, liquidity is scattered, and hacks are rising. Users face a fractured market experience.
private blockchains cut off liquidity and rebuild silos, echoing centralized risks like the Robinhood/GameStop saga. A horizontally scaled, natively interoperable system can unify liquidity, enable regulatory oversight, and provide the trust, efficiency, and clarity global markets need.
The question is whether tokenization will revolutionize global finance or collapse into a broken,inefficient system. This “infrastructure debate” is the central challenge that will define the future of on-chain finance.
New architectures are proving that a multichain foundation built on horizontal scaling and native interoperability is a better path.This method connects parallel blockchains so they can share security and finality without the need for brittle bridges.
Complex tokenized markets cannot function with silos-trapped liquidity. A transparent and connected base layer gives regulators what they need, and that’s clear audits with full tracking of provenance across the ecosystem.
Global finance is at a crossroads as real-world assets move on-chain. Trillions of dollars in value could be made more efficient, liquid, and transparent. Tokenization won’t succeed if it’s built on silos. The future of global markets depends on connectivity, not control.
