The tokenization of real-world assets has evolved from a distant promise into one of the most dynamic areas of modern finance. Treasury bills, investment funds, private credit, real estate, and a wide range of traditional financial instruments are being transformed into digital assets that can be issued and traded on blockchain networks.
The growth is difficult to ignore. Major financial institutions are investing significant resources into building this infrastructure, while asset managers and technology companies compete for position in a sector many view as one of the key drivers of the next phase of blockchain adoption.
Yet there is a curious contradiction at the center of this trend. Tokenization emerged from the cryptocurrency ecosystem, but much of the economic value it generates appears to be captured by traditional financial institutions rather than decentralized finance protocols.
Recent industry data reinforces this perception. Although the volume of tokenized assets continues to grow rapidly, only a small portion of that capital is actively being used within the DeFi ecosystem. This raises an important question: if tokenization ultimately becomes a multi-trillion-dollar market, who will capture the value created by this transformation?
Why Aren’t Tokenized Assets Reaching DeFi?
In theory, the combination of tokenization and decentralized finance seems like a natural fit. If a real-world asset is represented on a blockchain, it could be used as collateral, integrated into lending protocols, traded on decentralized platforms, or incorporated into automated investment strategies.
In practice, however, that integration is advancing much more slowly than many expected. One reason is regulatory. Many tokenized assets currently being issued come with investor identification requirements, trading restrictions, and compliance obligations that do not fit easily into the open and permissionless structure of DeFi.
There is also an operational challenge. Institutional investors tend to prioritize predictability, risk management, and legal certainty.
For many of them, keeping tokenized assets within regulated environments is more attractive than exposing them to decentralized protocols that still face challenges related to governance, security, and liquidity.
The result is a market where tokenization is expanding, but much of that growth remains confined within relatively closed systems. Assets are being issued on blockchain infrastructure, but they are not necessarily participating in the blockchain economy.
That distinction is crucial. Using blockchain as a technological infrastructure is one thing. Integrating those assets into the decentralized financial ecosystem built around that infrastructure is another.
The Problem Isn’t Tokenization—It’s Value Capture
The current situation highlights a debate that is gaining traction across multiple segments of the crypto market: the relationship between technological adoption and value capture. Innovation does not always benefit every participant in the ecosystem that helped create it.
The internet offers an interesting comparison. Its growth generated value for service providers, hardware manufacturers, digital platforms, software companies, and many other sectors. Not all of them captured the same share of that growth.
Something similar may be happening with tokenization. Financial institutions are finding ways to use blockchain technology to reduce costs, improve operational efficiency, and expand their product offerings. That represents a victory for the technology itself. But it does not automatically represent a victory for DeFi protocols, crypto-native applications, or the tokens associated with them.
In many cases, blockchain functions merely as a settlement or record-keeping layer. The economic value remains concentrated among asset issuers, regulated intermediaries, and the institutions responsible for distributing these products.
This dynamic helps explain why some investors have begun paying closer attention to which projects are actually capable of capturing part of the value generated by tokenization.
The discussion is no longer limited to identifying which networks are processing tokenized assets. The market now wants to know which participants are converting that growth into revenue, liquidity, and sustainable demand.
The Future of Tokenization May Depend More on DeFi Than It Appears
Despite the current challenges, many industry experts believe that the integration of tokenization and decentralized finance remains one of the sector’s greatest opportunities.
The reason is straightforward. Tokenization solves the problem of digitally representing assets. DeFi solves the problem of making those assets programmable.
When the two systems work together, they create possibilities that are difficult to replicate within traditional finance. A tokenized Treasury bill can be used as collateral for automated loans. A digital investment fund can participate in liquidity strategies. Assets from different markets can be combined within open and interoperable financial applications.
That potential still exists. The challenge is building frameworks capable of balancing regulatory requirements, institutional security standards, and the open nature that defines DeFi. It is precisely at this intersection that the next stage of industry growth is likely to emerge.
Tokenization has already demonstrated that there is strong institutional demand for blockchain infrastructure. What remains unclear is how the decentralized ecosystem will participate in that growth.
For that reason, the most important question may no longer be whether tokenization will succeed. The evidence increasingly suggests that it already is succeeding. The real question is who will benefit from the economic value it creates.
If DeFi can develop secure and efficient ways to integrate tokenized assets, it may capture a significant share of this expanding market. If not, tokenization could become one of blockchain technology’s greatest success stories without delivering the same impact to decentralized finance. And that distinction may define one of the most important competitive battles in the cryptocurrency industry over the next decade.
