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A look at the RWA’s promise of bringing trillions of dollars worth of value to the crypto space.
A new acronym has entered the crypto vocabulary and appears to be firmly establishing itself. RWA, short for Real World Assets, is gaining recognition as one of the most promising use cases in the crypto space now.
The idea is not new: at their core, RWAs are good old tokenized assets, such as tokenized shares of real estate, commodities, art, and even debt, like the US T-bills. Stablecoins, for instance, can be considered a form of RWA as they introduce US dollars (or other fiat currencies) to the blockchain. Synthetic assets, like those issued by Synthetix, achieve a similar goal by tokenizing popular stocks.
However, the RWA acronym has been recently used mostly to describe lending protocols built around these assets. They generate yield by investing users’ coins in off-chain assets. In return, users receive not only passive revenue but also a sort of IOU token, which can then be used across a variety of DeFi protocols.
The benefits of bringing RWA on the blockchain are plenty: democratizing investment, enhancing asset liquidity, enabling more efficient asset management, unlocking various new use cases within DeFi protocols… etc.
With the potential to bring – literally – trillions of dollars worth of value to the blockchain, this new trend is capturing the attention of an increasing number of crypto investors.
However, while some protocols look serious and promising, others raise suspicion. Let’s see why the RWA is so hyped now and what protocols stand out.
This simple rationale prompted Citi to declare RWA tokenization the foremost catalyst for crypto adoption. In their released in March, the bank’s analysts predicted that $1.9 trillion of non-financial debt, $1.5 trillion of real estate funds, $0.7 trillion of private equity, $1 trillion of securities financing, and $1 trillion of trade finance volumes would be tokenized by 2030.
This estimation means bringing over $6 trillion of value to the blockchain. Considering that the current market cap of the entire crypto space is slightly over $1 trillion, this prospect appears nothing short of ground-breaking.
The weight of RWA protocols is constantly growing, reaching a TVL of over $2.3 billion, according to . However, this figure is certainly much higher in reality, as some already established DeFi protocols are increasingly investing in RWA.
As of now, MakerDAO boasts a $2.3 billion RWA portfolio (not included in DeFiLlama’s calculations), including over $1.1 billion of treasury bonds and $500 million of Coinbase Prime yield (source: @steakhouse on ). That accounts for almost 50% of its funds.
One of the (relatively) early entrants into the RWA-specific space, Ondo Finance has been gaining significant and consistent traction since its launch in January, amassing some $164 million of TVL.
According to the company website, Ondo Finance invests in “multi-billion dollar, highly liquid exchange-traded funds, managed by the world’s preeminent bond managers”, mentioning notably BlackRock and Pimco. The firm also discloses the third-party custodians and auditors responsible for overseeing the funds.
Launched in July, stUSDT has become the biggest RWA protocol by far, securing a stunning $1.8 billion of TVL, of which almost half was added just last week.
The protocol is built on Ethereum and TRON, the brainchild of the controversial crypto personality Justin Sun, who is also sitting on the board of Huobi, the crypto exchange.
Mr. Sun touted stUSDT as a money market fund, which he hopes someday will become the “web3 alternative to Alipay’s Yu’e Bao”. Users can stake their $USDT on the platform (current yield is around 4% APY), which invests them into “high-grade short-term government bonds”, as outlined on its website. In return, users receive $stUSDT, which they can then use in other financial protocols.
Overall, this project is not deprived of interest, but some would say the red flags are too many, and the DeFi space does not stand opacity.
Traditional finance is steadily morphing into CeFi, which in turn acts as a gateway to DeFi. It is a fascinating process to watch, and while the current public opinion still dissociates the crypto and the fiat worlds, in reality, they are merging.
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