The wave of RWA in 2026 is coming faster than expected. Traditional financial giants are starting to seriously consider on-chain asset tokenization, but there is an unavoidable challenge: how to protect sensitive business data while also satisfying regulatory authorities in various countries?
The contradiction here is quite profound. Most public blockchains are built first, and privacy features are added later. Dusk Network, since its founding in 2018, has done the opposite—integrating zero-knowledge proofs and selective disclosure directly into the protocol itself. In other words, privacy is not an afterthought but an inherent feature.
They developed something called Confidential Smart Contracts. Institutions can issue bonds, stocks, or real estate tokens directly on-chain, with all transaction content encrypted throughout. As long as you grant regulatory agencies Audit Keys access, they can see the necessary information—others cannot, only authorized parties can. This approach has passed the EU’s MiCA regulation, and both the US SEC and Singapore’s MAS have recognized it.
This is not just on paper. After more than a year since their mainnet launch, they have successfully collaborated with the licensed Dutch exchange NPEX, moving over €200 million of regulated securities onto the chain. Coupled with Chainlink’s cross-chain bridging, these assets can seamlessly flow from Dusk to high-liquidity chains like Ethereum, providing an institutional-grade settlement experience.
The DUSK token itself is also quite interesting. As a network fuel and governance tool, its staking rate has remained stable above 65%. This number indicates that the market’s confidence in this infrastructure is not just a fleeting trend but a genuine long-term bet.
One noteworthy data point: by 2030, the RWA market size is expected to reach $16 trillion. In the face of such a tidal wave, privacy-compliant infrastructure is no longer a niche but a necessity. Those who can simultaneously meet institutional demands for privacy and regulatory requirements will hold the keys to the future.
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MevHunter
· 18h ago
Wait, can Dusk's privacy solution really be trusted by institutions? A 65% staking rate sounds good, but who isn't hyping their own metrics these days?
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2 billion euros in on-chain assets sounds impressive, but could this just be a small test before the real start?
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Meeting both privacy and compliance requirements is easy to talk about, but who actually does it? The key is who is willing to pay.
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If RWA truly reaches 16 trillion, is it already too late to get in now?
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Recognition by the Dutch exchange means global recognition? SEC folks are not that easy to please.
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I respect the idea behind Audit Keys, but do institutions really dare to put sensitive data on the chain?
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I don't judge whether the staking rate is high or low; I only care if institutions are using it. That’s real money.
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Feels like just another overhyped infrastructure. Let’s wait until it actually lands before judging.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainHolmes
· 22h ago
Dusk's privacy + compliance approach indeed addresses the pain points of traditional finance, but can the 16 trillion figure really be realized?
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What does a 65% staking rate indicate? It shows that these people are not betting on short-term fluctuations; they truly believe in this thing.
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2 billion euros worth of securities on the blockchain sounds impressive, but the key question is how many institutions are willing to follow suit? That’s the real litmus test.
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Zero-knowledge proofs are built-in from the start, not added as a patch later. This is indeed more thoughtful than most chains.
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Regulatory authorities can view the ledger with Audit Keys, but private transaction parties remain blind. This balanced design is quite clever.
View OriginalReply0
ser_aped.eth
· 01-08 16:55
Privacy + compliance is indeed a future necessity, and Dusk's approach is different.
View OriginalReply0
0xOverleveraged
· 01-08 16:40
Whoa, can privacy and compliance really be achieved at the same time? This logic has some substance.
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A 65% staking rate is no joke, indicating that some institutions are really betting on this.
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Moving 200 million euros across chains is already done—no hype, no black, this is indeed hardcore.
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Wait, isn't the Audit Keys design meant to make regulators see but not see? It’s a bit extreme.
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The RWA wave has indeed arrived; the question is who will be the first to reap this wave of benefits.
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Incorporating zero-knowledge proofs into the protocol from the start is forward-looking. Unlike some chains that scramble to catch up later.
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I’m interested in the seamless cross-chain flow to Ethereum; liquidity is king.
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This $16 trillion market—are we really late to the game now, or is another round of hype starting...
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So, ultimately the question is: can this time truly break through policy barriers, or will it be shut down again by a certain country's ban?
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The case study of NPEX’s 2 billion euros truly speaks louder than any white paper.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotDayLaborer
· 01-08 16:39
Privacy + compliance is indeed a tough combination, but Dusk's move is quite interesting.
A staking rate above 65% indicates that some people are really working seriously, not just hyping concepts.
The 200 million euro securities on the chain are just the beginning; whether large-scale institutional influx will follow depends on the future.
View OriginalReply0
RuntimeError
· 01-08 16:35
Privacy + compliance combination is indeed what major players want the most.
Built-in privacy is much more reliable than patching later.
200 million euros have already been on the chain, this is not just talk, there's substance.
A 65% staking rate shows people truly believe in this, it's not just hype.
With a market cap of 16 trillion, whoever gets in first wins.
Wait, has the SEC really approved this? Or does it still need to be refined?
On-chain bonds flowing to Ethereum, how to ensure cross-chain security?
Dusk timed this move quite accurately, RWA is really picking up speed.
Institutional-level settlement experience sounds high-end, but can the actual liquidity keep up?
I like the Audit Keys design, it feels both private and compliant.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidatedNotStirred
· 01-08 16:32
Privacy by nature > adding privacy later, that logic makes perfect sense
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200 million euros have been on the chain, that's not a small number, this is truly getting things done
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A 65% staking rate has remained stable for so long, indicating that everyone really trusts this system
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Instead of waiting for regulations to cut, it's better to proactively design a privacy + compliant architecture. Dusk's approach is indeed the right reverse operation
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The 16 trillion dollar cake is right there, whoever can handle both privacy and regulation at the same time wins—simple and straightforward
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They've been paving this road since 2018. While ordinary projects are still shouting concepts, they are already live and operational
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The logic of Audit Keys is interesting: authorization is transparent, no authorization means encryption. Institutions should be into this setup
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Wait, is 16 trillion by 2030 too optimistic? Where does this data come from?
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Seamless integration with Ethereum is indeed crucial. Without a liquid chain, even compliance is pointless
The wave of RWA in 2026 is coming faster than expected. Traditional financial giants are starting to seriously consider on-chain asset tokenization, but there is an unavoidable challenge: how to protect sensitive business data while also satisfying regulatory authorities in various countries?
The contradiction here is quite profound. Most public blockchains are built first, and privacy features are added later. Dusk Network, since its founding in 2018, has done the opposite—integrating zero-knowledge proofs and selective disclosure directly into the protocol itself. In other words, privacy is not an afterthought but an inherent feature.
They developed something called Confidential Smart Contracts. Institutions can issue bonds, stocks, or real estate tokens directly on-chain, with all transaction content encrypted throughout. As long as you grant regulatory agencies Audit Keys access, they can see the necessary information—others cannot, only authorized parties can. This approach has passed the EU’s MiCA regulation, and both the US SEC and Singapore’s MAS have recognized it.
This is not just on paper. After more than a year since their mainnet launch, they have successfully collaborated with the licensed Dutch exchange NPEX, moving over €200 million of regulated securities onto the chain. Coupled with Chainlink’s cross-chain bridging, these assets can seamlessly flow from Dusk to high-liquidity chains like Ethereum, providing an institutional-grade settlement experience.
The DUSK token itself is also quite interesting. As a network fuel and governance tool, its staking rate has remained stable above 65%. This number indicates that the market’s confidence in this infrastructure is not just a fleeting trend but a genuine long-term bet.
One noteworthy data point: by 2030, the RWA market size is expected to reach $16 trillion. In the face of such a tidal wave, privacy-compliant infrastructure is no longer a niche but a necessity. Those who can simultaneously meet institutional demands for privacy and regulatory requirements will hold the keys to the future.