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NYDIG says tokenization benefits grow with democratization, not immediately

Tokenization’s gradual impact on crypto markets

I was reading through this NYDIG research note, and it makes an interesting point about tokenization that I think gets overlooked sometimes. Greg Cipolaro, their global head of research, suggests that the benefits of tokenizing stocks and other real-world assets won’t be immediate for crypto networks like Ethereum.

He uses this phrase “light at first” that stuck with me. The initial benefits are pretty straightforward – just transaction fees from using these tokenized assets. The blockchain hosting them gets some network effects from storing them, but that’s about it in the early stages.

The democratization factor

What really caught my attention was his point about democratization. Cipolaro argues that the real benefits increase as access, interoperability, and composability improve. If these tokenized assets become more open and regulations become more favorable, their reach expands significantly.

He references SEC Chair Paul Atkins’ comments about the US financial system potentially embracing tokenization in a “couple of years.” That timeline feels realistic to me, not the overnight revolution some people expect.

Current landscape and challenges

Looking at the current state, the numbers are interesting. The Canton Network, which is a non-public blockchain, has $380 billion in tokenized assets – that’s 91% of the total represented value of all RWAs. Ethereum, the most popular public blockchain for this, has $12.1 billion.

But here’s the thing that makes this complicated: even on an open network like Ethereum, tokenized assets can vary greatly in their design. They’re often securities that still need traditional financial structures – broker-dealers, KYC requirements, whitelisted wallets, transfer agents.

I think that’s an important reality check. We’re not replacing traditional finance overnight; we’re integrating blockchain technology into existing systems for specific benefits like near-instant settlement, 24/7 operations, and programmatic ownership.

Future possibilities

The potential future Cipolaro describes is more compelling. He talks about these tokenized RWAs becoming part of DeFi ecosystems – as collateral for borrowing, assets to be lent out, or for trading. But he’s careful to note this will take time as technology develops, infrastructure gets built out, and regulations evolve.

What strikes me about this analysis is its measured tone. It’s not the typical hype you often see. Cipolaro acknowledges that the economic impacts to traditional cryptocurrencies are minimal today, but suggests investors should still pay attention.

Perhaps the most practical takeaway is that tokenization represents an evolution rather than a revolution. Companies are using blockchain for specific advantages within existing frameworks, and the real expansion happens when access becomes more democratized.

It’s a gradual process, but one that could reshape how we think about asset ownership and transfer over the coming years.

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