Tokenization—the idea of moving stocks, bonds, and other real-world assets over blockchains instead of traditional networks—is having a moment.
Here’s what’s happened in just the past month:
And that’s not all.
One of the largest crypto exchanges in Latin America announced plans to tokenize $200 million of real-world assets on the XRP Ledger; Galaxy Digital said tokenization could threaten NYSE revenues; and the total amount of real-world assets tokenized on-chain hit a new all-time high.
Clearly, something is happening here. But when will it impact the prices of Ethereum, Solana, XRP, Chainlink, and related assets?
I’ve always been of two minds about tokenization.
On the one hand, it feels inevitable. The fact that stocks only trade from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on weekdays is absurd. Imagine if your email shut down at 4:00 each Friday and didn’t turn back on until Monday at 9:30.
And don’t even get me started on how painfully slow settlement is. Remember this headline from last year, when stocks moved from T+2 to T+1 settlement?
In what other industry would we celebrate matching the operating speed from 1934?
But despite the sense of inevitability, I’ve often thought that we’re too early. Market structure is slow to change. Just ask anyone who witnessed how long it took to shift from floor-based stock trading to electronic stock trading.
But with the recent flurry of developments, I’m starting to think the tokenization narrative could begin impacting the price of related investments sooner rather than later.
The primary reason is that the market for tokenization is enormous.
Larry Fink—the CEO of BlackRock, and arguably the most important person in asset management—wrote in his annual shareholder letter this year: “Every stock, every bond, every fund—every asset—can be tokenized.”
Let’s break that down.
Stocks are a $117 trillion market. Bonds are a $140 trillion market. That’s $257 trillion up for grabs in the tokenization wars—and that’s before we even get to more esoteric assets.
For context, there’s been a flurry of excitement recently about the stablecoin market, which many (including U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent) think could grow from ~$250 billion to $2 trillion by 2030.
$2 trillion is a lot of money, and investing in the growth of stablecoins offers real opportunities. But $2 trillion would be chump change compared to tokenization—less than 1% of Larry Fink’s tokenization dream.
I still think it will take more than a decade before the majority of stock and bond trading happens on-chain. But with major financial firms like Robinhood and Tradeweb positioning themselves for the transition today, I’ve started to wonder: Could tokenization achieve 1-5% penetration in a few years? Could a dozen major pilot projects lift us to that level of market penetration? It seems possible, and it would translate into trillions of dollars … more than any other crypto application or asset, including Bitcoin.
The narrative around tokenization is only going to accelerate from here—if Robinhood is rolling out tokenized trading, you can bet that Charles Schwab and others are studying it aggressively. I’d expect a wave of additional announcements this Fall.
The cleanest way to invest in the rise of tokenization is to buy a basket of the top Layer 1 blockchains and infrastructure plays: Ethereum, Solana, XRP, Chainlink, etc.
One could argue for concentrating your bets—especially since Ethereum is the current leader in tokenization and is well positioned to win market share—but that seems overly specific to me. Just look at the announcements above: Many different players are getting bites at the apple. It would be unfortunate to call the tokenization trend early only to bet on the wrong horse.
One could also supplement this core blockchain exposure with a portfolio of stocks poised to benefit from tokenization, including Robinhood, Coinbase, Circle, and so on.
If Larry Fink is right, the tokenization market could grow over 4,000x in the coming years. There aren’t many markets that can say that.
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