Tokenized real-world assets have crossed the inflection from pilot to allocation. BlackRock, Franklin Templeton, and Fidelity have shipped live on-chain Treasury funds and private-credit strategies, driving tokenized RWA deposits in DeFi lending protocols above $840 million. The binding constraint is no longer smart-contract issuance but compliance architecture: issuers must now choose whether to embed rules inside the token (precise but inflexible), manage them off-token via whitelists (flexible but reliant on intermediaries), or enforce them at the network layer (simple but chain-bound). Each choice materially alters the asset’s portability, DeFi collateral eligibility, and cross-chain behavior.
On-chain professional capital is already behaving like TradFi: investors post tokenized collateral, borrow, and loop back into the same exposure—only faster and without prime brokers. Allocation data show precise macro responsiveness: tokenized Treasury exposure dropped sharply while tokenized gold surged multiple-fold as rate expectations shifted. Credit risk has become explicit and continuous via on-chain frameworks such as Credora, delivering A-to-D ratings that traditional markets cannot match in real time.
Structural gaps persist—corporate actions remain off-chain, and illiquid private credit or real estate still lag—yet the direction is unambiguous: tokenization is becoming productive collateral that generates additional yield inside portfolios rather than merely replicating off-chain products. For advisors, the question has shifted from “what does this asset represent?” to “how does it behave under stress and integrate with broader strategies?” Regulatory clarity and interoperability remain the final gates to mainstream status, but the infrastructure is already operational and scaling unevenly toward the simplest, most liquid assets first.

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