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Traditional financial markets won’t survive without RWA tokenization

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Opinion by: Abdul Rafay Gadit, co-founder of ZIGChain

America’s tariff regime has apparently fueled a global trade war, forcing investors to explore stable, yield-generating alternatives. A closer look reveals that illiquidity, opacity and scalability challenges have plagued global financial markets for long. They weren’t in great shape anyway, trade war or no trade war.

Tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) have risen to this occasion — thankfully. For one, they ensure predictable yields, providing a haven for investors amid uncertain market conditions and unproductive volatility. 

Above all, though, RWAs are a lifeboat for legacy finance, as they enhance market liquidity, bring transparency to opaque markets, and make finance more democratic. Traditional financial markets need to integrate — not resist — RWAs to stay relevant in the coming decade. 

RWAs to the rescue

In legacy finance, capital’s “computability” occurs through slow, expensive and unreliable intermediaries like banks. For example, these entities are primarily unable to rebalance portfolios quickly. 

This limits market scope, and consumers bear significant losses. There are persistent trust issues across the board, while fund managers face immense administrative burdens in handling clients. The bottom line: Everyone suffers, except the value-sucking go-betweens. 

That’s a big reason fundraising in private equity, a key pillar of global financial markets, declined 24% in 2024, per McKinsey’s report. Likewise, as the SIFMA 2025 Capital Markets Outlook revealed, US equity issuance has decreased by 0.6% annually since 2020. Initial public offerings have been down 8.5% during this period. 

RWAs fix these. They make portfolio management more straightforward and seamless, with scalable capital deployment even in turbulent markets. 

Tokenization automates verifiable transactions, enabling precise, deterministic, trustless economies — turning the status quo on its head. It also provides investors with low-risk, low-cost and rapid access to existing and emerging global financial markets. 

Recent: 5 ways real-world asset tokenization is transforming TradFi

No wonder onchain RWAs increased 85% to over $15 billion in 2024. And this trend still has momentum. RWAs are poised to remain a top investment category in crypto.

RWAs reached a new all-time high recently, surpassing $17 billion, with over 82,000 asset holders. Notably, tokenized private credit is the largest asset in the RWA industry, with over $11 billion in valuation. 

It’s clear that investors chose RWAs in the face of a $10-billion liquidation and general, persistent market volatility. Moreover, this asset class is making private credit great again, laying the foundation for future financial markets.

“Smart money” bets on RWAs 

JPMorgan, BlackRock, UBS, Citi, Goldman Sachs — all the big names in legacy finance have moved into RWAs. Capital inflows from such “smart money” entities helped onchain private credit grow 40% last year, while tokenized treasuries surged 179% overall.

All this could very well be routine diversification and capital expansion. But funds like Franklin Templeton’s Franklin Onchain US Government Money Fund (FOBXX) and BlackRock’s US dollar Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund (BUIDL) signal a more long-term motive. 

Initiatives like FOBXX and BUIDL are focused on transforming money markets through lower settlement times, easier liquidity access, better trading environments and other improvements. 

They leverage tokenization to introduce novel yield-generating opportunities in traditionally illiquid markets like the private credit sector. As data from PricewaterhouseCoopers suggests, this could be a $1.5-trillion disruption. S&P Global also believes private credit tokenization is the “new digital frontier” that solves liquidity and transparency issues.

RWAs are thus emerging as a viable, more lucrative alternative for institutional investors, who control nearly one-fourth of the $450-trillion legacy financial market. That’s a strong enough waking sign — plus there’s increasing demand from “retail” users (i.e., the remaining three-fourths of the pie).

Retail is the end-game for RWAs

Institutional adoption is excellent for building initial awareness around RWAs. Like it or not, their actions move the needle. In the long run, however, individual retail users stand to benefit most from RWAs. 

RWAs make capital markets accessible to grassroots investors, including unbanked populations. Fractional ownership, for instance, lets those with smaller capital holdings get exposure to high-ticket assets otherwise reserved for wealthy family offices and institutions.

Because of these benefits, retail users will choose RWAs over traditional, exclusive financial assets and markets. And now it’s a no-brainer for them, thanks to solutions like social investing platforms, which give users intuitive, hassle-free access to novel financial opportunities. 

Multiple reports from Mastercard to Tren Finance and VanEck showcase RWAs’ massive growth potential. It could be anywhere between $50 billion and $30 trillion over the next four to five years. 

Widespread retail adoption will drive this growth, and unless traditional markets adapt or adopt RWAs, they will lose the vast majority of their users. With institutional and retail capital moving into this emerging sector, it’s genuinely do-or-die for legacy systems.

Robust tools and platforms that leverage RWAs to bridge the gap between traditional and emerging financial markets are available now. That makes it a question of intent and priority more than anything else. 

Catch up or become obsolete — that’s the message. It’s the wartime arc, as it has been long due. The best part is that legacy assets coming onchain and markets leveraging RWAs will be a win-win for issuers, institutions and retail users. That’s what the world needs from a financial standpoint. It’s worth all the effort.

Opinion by: Abdul Rafay Gadit, co-founder of ZIGChain.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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Coin Market

Greedy L2s are the reason ETH is a 'completely dead' investment: VC

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Ether’s (ETH) declining appeal as an investment comes from layer-2’s draining value from the main network and a lack of community pushback on excessive token creation, a crypto venture capitalist says.

“The #1 cause of this is greedy Eth L2s siphoning value from the L1 and the social consensus that excess token creation was A-OK,” Castle Island Ventures partner Nic Carter said in a March 28 X post.

Ether “died by its own hand”

“ETH was buried in an avalanche of its own tokens. Died by its own hand,” Carter said. He said this in response to Lekker Capital founder Quinn Thompson’s claim that Ether is “completely dead” as an investment.

Source: Quinn Thompson

“A $225 billion market cap network that is seeing declines in transaction activity, user growth and fees/revenues. There is no investment case here. As a network with utility? Yes. As an investment? Absolutely not,” Thompson said in a March 28 X post. 

The ETH/BTC ratio — which shows Ether’s relative strength compared to Bitcoin (BTC) — is sitting at 0.02260, its lowest level in nearly five years, according to TradingView data. 

At the time of publication, Ether is trading at $1,894, down 5.34% over the past seven days, according to CoinMarketCap data.

Ether is down 17.94% over the past 30 days. Source: CoinMarketCap

Meanwhile, Cointelegraph Magazine reported in September 2024 that fee revenue for Ethereum had “collapsed” by 99% over the previous six months as “extractive L2s” absorbed all the users, transactions and fee revenue while contributing nothing to the base layer. 

Around the same time, Cinneamhain Ventures partner Adam Cochran said Based Rollups could solve the issue of Ethereum’s layer-2 networks pulling liquidity and revenue from the blockchain’s base layer.

Cochran said Based Rollups could “directly impact the monetization of Ethereum by making a pretty fundamental change to incentive structures.”

Related: Ethereum futures premium hits 1+ year low — Is it time to buy the ETH bottom?

Despite optimism toward the end of last year about Ether reaching $10,000 in 2025 — especially after reaching $4,000 in December, the same month Bitcoin touched $100,000 for the first time — it has since seen a sharp decline alongside the broader crypto market downturn.

Standard Chartered added to the bearish outlook via a March 17 client letter, which revised down their end of 2025 ETH price estimate from $10,000 to $4,000, a 60% reduction. 

However, several crypto traders, including pseudonymous traders Doctor Profit and Merlijn The Trader, are “insanely bullish” and argue that Ether could be the “best opportunity in the market.”

Source: Merlijn The Trader

Magazine: Arbitrum co-founder skeptical of move to based and native rollups: Steven Goldfeder

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Elon Musk’s sale of X to xAI just made fraud lawsuit a ‘lot spicer’

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Billionaire investor Elon Musk has sold his social media platform X to his AI startup xAI in an all-stock deal, sparking controversy as it coincides with a US judge rejecting his bid to dismiss a lawsuit tied to the social media platform.

The transfer of ownership of X to xAI on March 28 means that the class-action lawsuit against Musk — accusing him of defrauding former Twitter shareholders by delaying the disclosure of his initial investment in the social media platform — has become “a whole lot spicer,” Cinneamhain Ventures partner Adam Cochran said in a March 28 X post.

Acquisition may open up xAI to more ‘exposure’

On the same day that Musk said “xAI has acquired X in an all-stock transaction,” a US judge reportedly rejected Musk’s attempt to dismiss the lawsuit. Cochran said it has “opened up his AI entity to exposure here too, and it’s a much bigger pie.”

Source: Grok

Musk said the deal values xAI at $80 billion and X at $33 billion, factoring in $12 billion in debt from the $45 billion valuation. He originally bought X, formerly Twitter, for around $44 billion in April 2022.

“xAI and X’s futures are intertwined. Today, we officially take the step to combine the data, models, compute, distribution and talent,” Musk said.

Source: Bryan Rosenblatt

“This combination will unlock immense potential by blending xAI’s advanced AI capability and expertise with X’s massive reach,” he said, adding:

“This will allow us to build a platform that doesn’t just reflect the world but actively accelerates human progress.”

However, Cochran claimed that “Musk used his pumped up xAI stock to pay multiple times over value for X, but still take an $11B loss on the transaction.” He said that Musk is “screwing over xAI investors, and X investors” and was executed to sell user data to xAI.

Related: Elon Musk’s ‘government efficiency’ team turns its sights to SEC — Report

xAI is best known for its AI chatbot “Grok” which is built into the X platform. When Musk released it in November 2023, he claimed it could outperform OpenAI’s first iteration of ChatGPT in several academic tests.

Source: Raoul Pal

Musk explained at the time that the motivation behind building Grok is to create AI tools equipped to assist humanity by empowering research and innovation.

While Cochran said that Grok being valued at $80 billion is an “insanely dumb valuation,” crypto developer “Keef” disagrees. Keef said, “This is shady all around, but given the day, Grok is genuinely probably the top model for various tasks.”

Magazine: Arbitrum co-founder skeptical of move to based and native rollups: Steven Goldfeder

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Zhao pledges BNB for Thailand, Myanmar disaster relief

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Binance co-founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao is donating 500 BNB (BNB) each to Thailand and Myanmar following a 7.7 magnitude earthquake that caused severe damage to buildings and widespread flooding.

Zhao plans to distribute the funds through Binance and Binance Thailand if a third-party onchain donation platform cannot be found to distribute the disaster relief funds.

“I hope everyone is safe in Thailand,” the Binance founder wrote in a March 28 X post before announcing the contributions to both countries affected by the earthquake.

According to The Guardian, at least 144 people are confirmed to have died as a result of the catastrophic earthquake as first responders in both countries continue rescue efforts to free people trapped under rubble.

Source: CZ

Related: Thailand regulator approves USDT, USDC stablecoins

Disaster strikes Myanmar and Thailand

The earthquake struck on March 28 at approximately 1:20 PM local time. The epicenter of the earthquake was approximately 10 miles from Mandalay — the second-largest city in Myanmar.

The death toll in both countries is expected to rise as relief efforts continue, with 732 individuals reportedly injured as a result of the earthquake.

Myanmar’s junta chief Min Aung Hlaing has called upon any country willing to help with the disaster relief efforts to provide any aid it can.

Crypto donations amplify aid during times of crisis

The cross-border efficiencies, low transaction costs, and near-instant settlement times of cryptocurrencies make digital assets an ideal medium for disaster relief funds.

Following a 7.8 magnitude earthquake that impacted Turkey and Syria in February 2023, philanthropist Haluk Levent began collecting crypto disaster relief donations.

The Giving Block, a company that works with nonprofit organizations to facilitate crypto donations, also used crypto to raise funds for the victims of the Maui wildfires in 2023 and managed to give over $1 million to the relief effort.

More recently, in January, The Giving Block started an emergency relief fundraiser for those impacted by the California wildfires in Los Angeles and the surrounding areas.

At the time of this writing, the organization has raised over $1 million for the California wildfire relief fund.

Magazine: Crypto is changing how humanitarian agencies deliver aid and services

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