Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto arm says don’t frame blockchain’s Wall Street moment as an ideological revolution — it’s a technology migration more like the cloud takeover of enterprise software. In a recent essay, a16z crypto general partner Guy Wuollet argues that financial firms aren’t embracing blockchains because they’re obsessed with decentralization. They’re doing it because blockchains act as shared, programmable market rails that cut costs, tighten risk controls and simplify coordination across counterparties. Wuollet calls this shift a “digital transformation for financial services in the same way that cloud services once represented the digital transformation for large enterprises.” Why that matters - Legacy finance still runs on siloed databases, staggered settlement cycles and constant reconciliation between institutions. That creates friction, operational risk and delays. - Blockchains offer a single, auditable source of truth — a common infrastructure where multiple firms can coordinate in real time. Wuollet describes that shared ledger as a Schelling point: a focal standard that counterparties can use to upgrade backend systems without rebuilding everything from scratch. - The practical payoff is composability: digital, tokenized assets can be combined like software building blocks, enabling developers and institutions to mix custody, settlement, collateral, lending and trading functions more quickly and cheaply. a16z has been pushing this narrative for months. In an April essay the firm said Wall Street isn’t merely experimenting — it’s “migrating to” blockchain, citing exchanges, clearinghouses and trading platforms moving on-chain to lower costs and shorten settlement windows. Real-world moves The industry is starting to follow. Examples Wuollet and a16z point to include: - Börse Stuttgart’s Seturion, a blockchain-based settlement layer for tokenized securities. - Société Générale–FORGE issuing regulated stablecoins such as EURCV and USDCV to enable on-chain settlement. - Product innovation such as Bitwise’s Hyperliquid ETF and a broader push to tokenized financial infrastructure beyond bitcoin and ether. A structural change, not a marketing line Wuollet frames the transition as structural: finance is shifting from a closed reconciliation model — where every institution maintains its own ledger and reconciles with others — to an on-chain coordination model built around shared infrastructure. If that trajectory continues, blockchain will cease to be viewed as an alternative financial system and instead become a standard layer of financial plumbing. That thesis is already echoed in ongoing coverage around tokenized securities, on-chain settlement and other institutional moves into digital-asset infrastructure. For proponents like a16z, the blockchain narrative for finance is less about political or philosophical purity and more about pragmatic system architecture — the next phase in how markets get built. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news