Asset tokenization now and in the future
The term “asset tokenization” is in great fashion, but it is used liberally and across contexts.
December 2024
Elliot Hentov
Head of Macro Policy Research, State Street Global Advisors
For the sake of clarity, it would be helpful to consider an overview of asset tokenization across the main pillars of global capital markets. The transition from existing market structures to a world where the representation of financial instruments is digitally native (in token form) is a major step, but not equally impactful across all asset classes. Hence, it is worthwhile to highlight which asset classes are likely to undergo transition earlier or later; where the transition will meaningfully alter the market structure by changing supply/demand dynamics; and where future challenges or limits lie for asset tokenization.
Asset tokenization across time and asset classes
Figure 1 illustrates what a transition from the status quo may look like. We conclude that mass adoption will originate in bonds (including money market funds), commodities and private equity funds, with the most transformative impact likely to be on private equity funds and the bond industry in the nearer term. The prospect of tokenization and fractional ownership of illiquid individual private markets would be revolutionary, but outside the fund structure it is likely to be very far in the future.
Tokenization is a big deal, but rollout and adoption will be slow
The appeal of asset tokenization is tantalizing and the advantages over existing market operations can appear obvious. The most compelling benefits are improvements to the operation of markets that should make them faster, cheaper, more transparent and increasingly accessible. These include faster settlement, in some cases “atomic,” i.e., the transfer of security and payment happens simultaneously. This post-trade automation would do away with multi-day settlement times and enable 24/7 trading, which, in some markets, could improve liquidity by bringing in additional supply and demand. Similarly, the shift to smart contract-enabled distributed ledger technologies implies fewer intermediaries and less fees spent on their services. The key feature of blockchain technology to permanently record transactions could also greatly improve market integrity and accountability. And finally, for certain financial instruments, smart contracts allow for automation and reduction in operational complexity by embedding certain corporate actions, such as scheduled coupon or dividend payments, into the token itself. All of the above is attainable but requires time to materialize. This is because most of the efficiencies only come to fruition once the entire ecosystem is built. This includes a market solution that enables the settlement of the cash leg for digital asset transactions.
It is ultimately a network innovation, which requires all parts of the network to modernize, including issuance, trading, custody, etc. For this to occur, investors and providers need regulatory clarity and standardized norms. There are also technological challenges, such as cybersecurity, network protection, scalability and interoperability among different blockchains. These may all seem daunting but are eminently solvable; again, it just will take time. And of course, investors will need to gain comfort with the purchase, trading and usage of tokenized assets, which requires operational and governance changes in their organizations, too. Disrupted intermediaries are likely to exaggerate all these challenges, which will delay broad-based adoption, but will not ultimately prevent it given the compelling benefits.
Systemic implications
Of course, there are caveats to the benefits of tokenization, especially that they do not apply equally to all asset classes and markets. In fact, they are greatest where current market inefficiencies are large. In some asset classes, such as equities, the current digital representations of shareholder ownership work relatively well and, while tokenization offers an efficiency gain, it is much smaller than for bond or private markets.
There are a number of questions to consider:
When considering the long-term vision, one might ponder what the financial ecosystem will look like once all parts of the network are modernized to support tokenization and how it will reshape global capital markets in terms of efficiency, transparency and accessibility. These questions aim to provoke thought and discussion on the multifaceted aspects of asset tokenization, its potential benefits, challenges and long-term implications for the financial industry. However, it is difficult to see how tokenization will be stopped; it seems a matter of when not if financial markets will embrace asset tokenization.