September was a busy month with RWA Summit, KBW, and Token2049 back-to-back. One point is clear: tokenized securities are here to stay, and the questions revolve around “how” and “when” instead of “what” and “why.”
Below are five takeaways and what they signal for the next year.
Defi’s Utility is Undercounted Because the Best Infrastructure Runs Quietly
Markets still miss what happens when tokenized assets actually work onchain. The practical benefits today are access and programmability for onchain investors: 24/7 settlement windows, access to new securities onchain, clear data, and faster reconciliation.
DeFi connectivity is being solved for RWAs. Different designs are emerging to connect institutional assets with onchain liquidity:
- Horizon takes a permissioned assets, permissionless access path in a blue-chip market.
- Pendle supports permissioned or permissionless structures through yield/option primitives.
- Centrifuge uses a wrapped token on professional fund shares (deRWA) to provide optionality.
Under the hood, standards like ERC-4626 and ERC-7540 anchor these flows. In our case, 4626 handles real-time vault accounting and 7540 handles queued subscriptions and redemptions, so instruments behave like software while meeting institutional requirements. These standards make RWAs composable enabling liquidity and risk management across protocols.
Once RWAs are composable, they stop being a “category” and become a feature of onchain capital markets.
“Crypto is Fintech” is Now Table Stakes
Across recent RWA gatherings the shift was the same: blockchain is moving to the background. Payment rails, stablecoins, neobanks, and cards are shipping consumer distribution while the chain does the work under the hood. Users want outcomes, not mechanics. If someone gets S&P 500 exposure in an app, they care about the index, not that it is delivered via tokenization. If a card pays 8% rewards sourced from DeFi lending, they care about the rewards, not the rails.
Tokenization is no longer an innovation exercise. It is an operational stack for issuance, distribution, and the treasury and risk workflows that sit around them.
We came into the cycle with SPXA already live. S&P 500 exposure on programmable rails with S&P Dow Jones Indices benchmarks and Janus Henderson as sub-investment manager. That made the conversations concrete: teams asked how we create liquidity, how subscriptions and redemptions run, and how reporting lands, rather than debating “tokens.”
As tokenization moves from pilots to core finance, the products that win will be fintech building blocks that disappear into apps and workflows.
Institutional Managers are Past “If”. The Question is How Fast
The hesitation phase is over. Large managers are setting deployment timelines and assigning owners for custody, transfer controls, distribution, and reporting. The brief is practical: map mandates, define the operating model, and plug into systems already in use.
On the market side, Aave Horizon provides a useful reference point. Qualified users can borrow onchain liquidity against tokenized treasuries and AAA credit, so RWAs function as collateral rather than only store of value. That pattern controlled access with clear paths to liquidity is what accelerates institutional rollout.
To keep new products on schedule, founders also need rails. That is the intent of RWA Bento: $500K from Onigiri Capital and $100K in Centrifuge infrastructure credits so teams can move from prototype to distribution without rebuilding core plumbing.
Fragmentation is Fine When Money Moves Freely
There will be many chains and many stablecoins. That is acceptable if the value moves between them with no visible friction. Two things matter: chain-to-chain transfers that feel instant, and atomic, low-cost swaps between stablecoins.
The implementation details live in the backend. Canonical mint and burn, reliable messaging, and chain abstraction let managers operate from a hub and distribute to spokes. Investors subscribe and redeem on the networks they already use, while routing and gas handling stay under the surface.
Primary RWA instruments carry their own access controls and transfer hooks on the native line. When broader distribution is needed, wrappers like deRWA provide a separate path into DeFi with wrapper-level rules, not a 1:1 inheritance of the primary instrument’s rules.
Do this well, and users do not have to pick a chain. Liquidity feels like one pool, and issuance and secondary activity scale without new tooling for the end user.
Investors are (Finally) Judging Protocols Like Businesses
The center of gravity is shifting from hype and narratives to fundamentals. Investors want to see revenue, unit economics, a path to profitability, and sustainable growth supported by a credible leadership team and disciplined IR.
For treasuries and index products, the focus is on fees, duration management, and operational rigor. For credit, it is loss buffers, collections, and exposure limits. For platforms, it is recurring fees, service levels, audit-ready reporting, and governance that travel with the asset.
Narratives still matter for direction, but durable value follows cash flows, controls, and execution.
What to Watch Next
Index products become standard collateral. SPXA shows how familiar market exposure meets programmable rails. Expect index fund tokens to join treasuries and credit as baseline collateral in onchain lending and hedging.
deRWA expands distribution. Wrapping institutional assets as deRWA puts them in DEXs, wallets, and lending markets that users already frequent. That reduces integration friction for both builders and traders.
Chain abstraction becomes table stakes. Issuers will expect hub-and-spoke control, chain abstraction, and auditable cross-chain messaging out of the box. The multichain debate belongs in the backend, not the boardroom.
Builders get capital plus rails. Programs that combine funding with infrastructure shorten time to market. RWA Bento is one template: founders can focus on underwriting, origination, distribution, and risk, not rebuilding core infrastructure.
RWAs are moving from pilot to production. The stack is open, modular, and designed to meet institutional requirements. The next leg depends on more than execution. It requires interoperable standards that work across chains, audit-ready disclosures on a regular cadence, resilient custody and incident response, and distribution that reaches users without exposing the rails. Add clear policy frameworks and deeper secondary liquidity, and tokenization becomes ordinary financial infrastructure. From there, the market compounds.