RWAs Decolam in DeFi: When Real Assets Surpassed Decentralized Exchanges

Stop everything. Real-world assets (RWAs) have just surpassed DEXs and become the 5th largest category in DeFi by total value locked (TVL). We are talking about a structural change in the market.

The numbers don’t lie: RWAs jumped from approximately $12 billion at the end of 2024 to around $17 billion currently. At the beginning of this year? They weren’t even in the top 10 of DeFi. This acceleration is no coincidence – institutional capital is finally finding its place on the blockchain.

What Is Driving RWAs?

It’s no longer experimentation. Vincent Liu, an investor at Kronos Research, points out that growth is driven by “balance sheet incentives” – in other words: real money seeking predictable yields.

With persistent high interest rates, tokenized Treasury bonds and private credit have become serious alternatives. Even better: regulators have become clearer, opening the door for institutional allocators who previously hesitated.

Result? By early 2025, RWAs (excluding stablecoins) already reach $24 billion. Tokenized government debt and private credit are the true engines.

Ethereum Leads, But Multichain Is Taking Off

Ethereum remains the main settlement hub for RWAs – most tokenized debt instruments and structured funds are based there.

But the story gets interesting as emerging blockchains capture growing shares:

  • BNB Chain
  • Avalanche
  • Solana
  • Polygon
  • Arbitrum

Each still represents only a few percentage points individually, but together they signal a future of fragmented and multichain tokenized assets.

And there’s more: permissioned infrastructure like Canton Network already hosts over 90% of the institutional RWA market share – a regulated environment that preserves privacy and still interacts with DeFi liquidity.

Tokenized Treasuries: The Gateway

Tokenized US Treasuries have become the product that brings capital onto the blockchain. Leading platforms in this wave:

  • BUIDL (BlackRock)
  • USYC (Circle)
  • BENJI (Franklin Templeton)
  • OUSG (Ondo)

Together, these vehicles pushed exposure to tokenized Treasuries into the billions range, consolidating government debt as a core yield asset on the blockchain.

Liu notes that the bottleneck is no longer tokenization. It’s liquidity, functioning secondary markets, and real integration with the traditional financial system.

Looking ahead to 2026, the questions have changed: who issues, how RWAs work as collateral, and which platform dominates secondary flow.

Gold and Commodities: A New Chapter

Rallies in precious metals have brought tokenized commodities into focus. The market already hovers around $4 billion in capitalization, led by Tether Gold and Paxos Gold, which grew alongside spot prices.

Liu points out that metals are “elevating niche commodities to macro-relevant assets.” Investors now demand 24/7 access with instant settlement on the blockchain during volatility.

As prices rise, issuance attracts liquidity, which reinforces adoption. A positive cycle, behavioral validation beyond just seeking yield.

The Next Act of DeFi

By 2026, it is expected:

RWAs have become fundamental building blocks, not side experiments

Treasuries and private credit anchor yields

Commodities bring macro relevance and volatility protection

Interoperability is gold – RWAs evolve as neutral collateral, flowing seamlessly across chains

The market is rewriting the bridge between traditional finance and native blockchain liquidity. This transition is set to redefine the next growth cycle of DeFi.

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