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Tokenization has left the paper and entered reality. And now comes the hard part.
If you follow the capital markets, you've already seen the big names getting involved: BlackRock, Franklin Templeton, Fidelity launching treasury funds and direct credit strategies on the blockchain. It sounds simple in theory — traditional assets now on-chain, without intermediaries, settlement in seconds. But there's much more happening underneath.
The real challenge isn't creating the token. Anyone can do that. The problem starts afterward: compliance, identity, transfer rules, sanctions, lifecycle management. RedStone released a recent report analyzing how these systems are truly being built, and some points are quite revealing.
Take compliance, for example. Issuers have to decide where to place the rules. It can be inside the token, managed by smart contracts in each transaction. It can be outside, using permission lists. Or it can be at the network level, where the blockchain decides what passes. Each approach solves one problem and creates another. Putting everything inside the token? Total control, but less flexibility. Permission lists? More flexible, but you depend on intermediaries. Rules at the network level? Easy for token design, but complicates moving the asset between chains.
And that matters. A lot. It determines whether the asset can move between blockchains, integrate with DeFi protocols like Morpho or Aave, serve as collateral in lending strategies. Two tokenized funds with exactly the same underlying asset can behave completely differently because of this architectural choice.
Real-world usage is growing rapidly. Tokenized asset deposits in DeFi lending protocols have already surpassed $840 million. Investors are using tokenized gold as collateral, borrowing against it, reallocating capital — it's the same capital efficiency logic as traditional finance, but executed without a primary broker, faster and cheaper.
And something curious is happening: in one major protocol, exposure to tokenized bonds dropped significantly while allocations to tokenized gold exploded in the same period. It tracked changes in interest rate expectations with impressive accuracy. It's professional capital responding to macroeconomic signals through on-chain infrastructure.
But pieces are still missing. Corporate actions depend heavily on off-chain processes. Less liquid assets like private credit and real estate don't fully fit DeFi standards. Until that’s resolved, tokenization will grow unevenly — simple assets upfront, complex ones behind.
The good news? Framework creators are aware of this. Solutions are expected to emerge soon.
And about the future? Tokenization becomes standard when it integrates with existing financial systems instead of competing. It requires interoperability between blockchains, custodians, and traditional infrastructure. It needs regulatory clarity. When tokenized assets are as efficient, liquid, and reliable as traditional securities, no one will call it innovation anymore. It will just be the infrastructure supporting modern markets.
A common misconception: tokenization automatically creates liquidity. It doesn't. It only makes assets more accessible. You tokenize a property into a thousand pieces, but without active buyers and sellers, trading remains difficult. The market is still very early, with different platforms building their own ecosystems, liquidity fragmented instead of unified.
For younger investors, all this opens doors. Generations that grew up with rapid technological change expect financial systems to evolve at the same pace. Tokenization offers access to private markets, real estate, a more digital and flexible experience. It’s not just a new opportunity — it aligns with how they already live.