A $2 trillion market ripe for disruption.
Every traditional asset will eventually be tokenized.
Here’s BlackRock CEO Larry Fink making the case in his latest 2025 investor letter:
“Every stock, every bond, every fund — every asset — can be tokenized. If they are, it will revolutionize investing. Markets wouldn’t need to close. Transactions that currently take days would clear in seconds. And billions of dollars currently immobilized by settlement delays could be reinvested immediately back into the economy, generating more growth.”
Which asset is winning that race? It’s private credit, with about $12.9 billion onchain, as of today. For context, tokenized T-bills are currently $6.2 billion, commodities are $1.4 billion, and equities are $484 million.
Private credit markets involve businesses borrowing from institutional lenders like private equity funds and asset managers, rather than banks.
It’s a booming ~$2 trillion market globally today, with potential growth to $3 trillion by 2028, by Moody’s estimates.
Now, here are the problems:
These problems — inaccessibility, illiquidity and non-transparency — are ameliorated by blockchains to an extent.
It’s a $2 trillion market for the taking, and crypto companies are seizing the opportunity.
Each company’s model varies, but the idea is generally the same.
Offchain loan originators offer loans to lenders issued as an ERC-20 token or ERC-721 non-fungible token governed by smart contracts. Lenders deposit stablecoins or crypto asset collateral, entitling them to the token which represents a legal claim on future interest payments.
DeFi private credit is dominated today by Figure, with about $9.9b in active loans today.
Figure tokenizes its private credit assets on Provenance, an L1 blockchain built with the Cosmos SDK. While the chain is publicly usable, smart contracts require governance approval, presumably to limit the chain’s use for RWA tokenization. The majority of Figure’s loans are “Home Equity Lines of Credit” (HELOC) — revolving credit products offered to everyday homeowners. For a deep dive on Provenance, see Marc-Thomas Arjoon’s Blockworks Research report.