Plato Data Intelligence.
Vertical Search & Ai.

RWAs, or how crypto is coming full circle

Date:

Real-World-Assets are the latest and greatest in crypto, as they promise to usher in the age of financial institutions adopting crypto for real.

It’s ironic to think back to the beginning of this entire industry when Satoshi wanted to create an alternative to the traditional financial system without ties to it. A few years later, we all yearn for those same institutions who brought the crisis over us to start using our web3 native tech. It’s as if Crypto was a kid who never wanted to be like their parents to turn out like them eventually. Cognitive dissonance aside, this isn’t the first time we’re all getting excited about tokens backed by something valuable irl.

Already in 2018, projects discovered that tokenizing valuable assets such as real estate could be an attractive way to bridge the gap between traditional financial markets and blockchain.

But what are RWAs in crypto anyway?

The category does not describe everything you might consider an asset, but tokens that represent financial assets, including houses, gold, and any financial security like loans, bonds, and even carbon credits.

Since all these assets live primarily off-chain, they are brought on-chain through tokenization. It’s misleading to say they are now on-chain because, obviously, if you tokenize a diamond, the certificate of ownership might be on-chain, but the actual diamond is not. It’s held somewhere in a safe place, or you’d hope so.

The benefits of tokenizing RWAs include enhanced liquidity, price discovery, accessibility, increased transparency, and lower overhead, as smart contracts run automatically with no humans needed.

What if the asset in the real world is destroyed?

Houses can burn down, and even diamonds, as the acclaimed NFT expert Tasha proved. After creating an NFT representing her diamond on OpenSea, she destroyed the diamond and still continued receiving offers for the now unbacked NFT. 💎

Funny enough, the Tasha tale ended in the NFT disappearing from OpenSea.

With RWA tokens not issued by influencers, though, the more realistic outcome is that they are insured, and holders get reimbursed.

Real-World-Assets in practice

While the narrative didn’t take off in 2018, now is the right time as big economies continue increasing bond rates to stifle inflation. The bad news is inflation reduces the amount of ramen you can buy.

The good news is you can now earn over 4% on US treasuries, more than on your USD stablecoins in major DeFi protocols. Plus, you don’t have to worry as much about de-pegging events, either. Or let’s put it this way, if the US Dollar de-pegged, we’d have bigger problems.

The organizations already making a killing in RWAs on-chain aren’t your standard degen. MakerDAO, an OG stablecoin DAO holds $1.14 billion in US treasuries and earns 80% of its fee revenues from RWAs.

Tokenized loans earn even better yields with an average of 10.62% APY for lenders, plus the warm fuzzy feeling of giving a real person money they can use for their business. Such loans are facilitated by DeFi protocols like Centrifuge that connect the traditional finance bros with crypto degens. The protocol has partnered with Blocktower last year to help them bring $220 million of their collateralized lending on-chain, making it one of the biggest players in the still young RWAs on-chain industry.

While crypto purists probably hate this increased reliance on centralized custodians and working together with the same system we tried to replace, others are more upbeat, focusing on the benefits tokenizing real-world assets brings, such as enabling more people to participate in the appreciation of assets.

It may be time to grow up and ditch the degen hat at least a little. Or, to be more pragmatic, if you can’t beat them might as well take some of their yield. 🌾

Naomi from CoinJar

CoinJar’s digital currency exchange services are operated in Australia by CoinJar Australia Pty Ltd ACN 648 570 807, a registered digital currency exchange provider with AUSTRAC; and in the United Kingdom by CoinJar UK Limited (company number 8905988), registered by the Financial Conduct Authority as a Cryptoasset Exchange Provider and Custodian Wallet Provider in the United Kingdom under the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017, as amended (Firm Reference No. 928767). Cryptoassets carry high risk. Due to the potential volatility of the cryptoasset markets, the value of your investments may fall significantly and lead to total loss. Cryptoassets are complex and are unregulated in the UK, and you are unable to access the UK Financial Service Compensation Scheme or the UK Financial Ombudsman Service. We use third party banking, safekeeping and payment providers, and the failure of any of these providers could also lead to a loss of your assets. We recommend you obtain financial advice before making a decision to use your credit card to purchase cryptoassets or to invest in cryptoassets. Capital Gains Tax may be payable on profits.

spot_img

Latest Intelligence

spot_img

Chat with us

Hi there! How can I help you?