Yesterday’s U.S. House Financial Services Committee signals that tokenization is increasingly being viewed through the lens of market infrastructure than a digital asset development.
Policymakers are placing greater attention on how legal ownership, settlement frameworks, and investor protections adapt when securities begin moving through blockchain-based systems.
The next phase of adoption will depend largely on whether liquidity, custody standards, and transfer mechanisms develop with enough consistency for broader institutional participation and less on whether assets can be tokenized.
Issuance is expanding across pilot programs, but secondary market depth remains the more decisive factor for long-term institutional scale.
This indicates the shift in how digital asset infrastructure is now being evaluated.
As users increasingly move between crypto, gold, stocks and other forms of tokenized exposure, platforms that reduce fragmentation and simplify access across markets are likely to become more relevant within global capital flows.
Gracy Chen, CEO of Bitget
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