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Why Tokenization Is Becoming Wall Street’s Next Upgrade?
Tokenization discussions accelerated after changes at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, according to Domingo. He said SEC Chair Paul Atkins has supported responsible adoption of blockchain-based securities.
As a result, traditional firms became more willing to explore on-chain issuance without increased regulatory risk. However, regulatory clarity alone did not drive adoption. Domingo pointed to BlackRock’s decision in 2024 to tokenize assets with Securitize.
That move, notably from the world’s largest asset manager, drew attention across Wall Street. Soon after, firms including Apollo Group and JPMorgan increased activity around tokenized products.
Replacing Siloed Ledgers With On-Chain Records
Domingo explained that stocks, bonds and funds rely on fragmented ledgers that require constant reconciliation. Each trade, dividend, or redemption updates several disconnected systems. However, tokenization places ownership records on a single distributed ledger secured by cryptography.
This structure allows atomic settlement, where cash and securities exchange simultaneously. According to Domingo, that feature reduces intermediaries and releases capital faster. Settlement can occur instantly using stablecoins against tokenized securities. However, he noted that instant settlement remains optional, depending on market needs.
Market Size and Asset Focus
Securitize estimates the current tokenized asset market at $25 billion to $30 billion. Domingo said forecasts project growth toward $2 trillion over time. Even a reduced market share would represent substantial scale, based on those figures.
Early interest centered on illiquid assets, such as art and real estate. However, Domingo said focus shifted to highly liquid assets. Stablecoins represent tokenized dollars, while tokenized Treasuries rank second by size.
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