A $16 Trillion Path: AR Tokens, Which Can Close the Gap Between TradFi and DeFi

Thursday, 19/06/2025 | 13:41 GMT by Michael Bar Zeev
  • Despite strong institutional interest, most RWAs remain custodial and legally complex, limiting DeFi use.
  • For DeFi to become a financial backbone, tokenized assets must be designed to function as crypto—not just imitate TradFi.
DeFi and RWAs

Over the past year, interest in bringing real-world assets (RWAs) on-chain has grown rapidly. From tokenized U.S. Treasuries to synthetic equities, the vision is clear: to combine the stability of traditional finance (TradFi) with the flexibility of decentralized finance (DeFi).

Yet, current RWA implementations often fall short of this promise. Many exist in legal gray areas, are locked in custodial systems, and resemble traditional securities more than crypto-native assets. These structures may live on-chain in code, but they rarely function that way in practice.

A Market Primed for Growth

The opportunity, however, is massive. According to the Boston Consulting Group, tokenized RWAs could reach a value of $16 trillion by 2030. At present, less than $23 billion of RWAs are tokenized on-chain—just a fraction of the potential.

Asset Referenced Tokens

Institutions are paying attention. BlackRock has highlighted tokenization as a focus. HSBC is expanding its tokenized product offerings. The Bank for International Settlements is running pilots with central banks in the U.S., Japan, and France.

But despite these developments, most RWA infrastructure today is being built through a TradFi lens: permissioned, centralized, and difficult to use within DeFi protocols.

DeFi Needs Real-World Exposure

Currently, most DeFi activity centers on crypto-native assets that are volatile and speculative. Without stable, real-economy assets like bonds or real estate, DeFi lacks the foundation to attract long-term capital. Sustainable growth requires more than yield farming—it needs access to assets that reflect real economic value.

Early tokenization efforts—via synthetic derivatives or regulated wrappers—struggled to deliver on that promise. They remain siloed, inflexible, and often unusable within major DeFi protocols like Aave or Uniswap.

Asset-Referenced Tokens: A Practical Alternative

This is where Asset-Referenced Tokens (AR tokens) present a promising path. AR tokens are fully backed by real-world assets but are designed to operate natively within the crypto environment.

Unlike traditional tokenized securities, they are not weighed down by restrictive custody models or security classifications. Instead, they align with evolving regulatory regimes like the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, which treats them as crypto assets.

This approach opens the door for AR tokens to function across DeFi protocols—used as collateral, traded on decentralized exchanges, and integrated into composable systems—while remaining compliant and secure.

Designing for Crypto from Day One

DeFi’s long-term success depends on its ability to anchor itself in the real economy. That requires more than just infrastructure; it requires assets that reflect the world we live in. The convergence of regulation , institutional interest, and blockchain maturity has created the conditions to bring RWAs on-chain in meaningful ways.

But to unlock that potential, tokenized assets must be built to function like crypto from the outset. AR tokens offer a path forward—not by mimicking TradFi, but by improving it—laying the foundation for a financial system that is more open, resilient, and interoperable.

Over the past year, interest in bringing real-world assets (RWAs) on-chain has grown rapidly. From tokenized U.S. Treasuries to synthetic equities, the vision is clear: to combine the stability of traditional finance (TradFi) with the flexibility of decentralized finance (DeFi).

Yet, current RWA implementations often fall short of this promise. Many exist in legal gray areas, are locked in custodial systems, and resemble traditional securities more than crypto-native assets. These structures may live on-chain in code, but they rarely function that way in practice.

A Market Primed for Growth

The opportunity, however, is massive. According to the Boston Consulting Group, tokenized RWAs could reach a value of $16 trillion by 2030. At present, less than $23 billion of RWAs are tokenized on-chain—just a fraction of the potential.

Asset Referenced Tokens

Institutions are paying attention. BlackRock has highlighted tokenization as a focus. HSBC is expanding its tokenized product offerings. The Bank for International Settlements is running pilots with central banks in the U.S., Japan, and France.

But despite these developments, most RWA infrastructure today is being built through a TradFi lens: permissioned, centralized, and difficult to use within DeFi protocols.

DeFi Needs Real-World Exposure

Currently, most DeFi activity centers on crypto-native assets that are volatile and speculative. Without stable, real-economy assets like bonds or real estate, DeFi lacks the foundation to attract long-term capital. Sustainable growth requires more than yield farming—it needs access to assets that reflect real economic value.

Early tokenization efforts—via synthetic derivatives or regulated wrappers—struggled to deliver on that promise. They remain siloed, inflexible, and often unusable within major DeFi protocols like Aave or Uniswap.

Asset-Referenced Tokens: A Practical Alternative

This is where Asset-Referenced Tokens (AR tokens) present a promising path. AR tokens are fully backed by real-world assets but are designed to operate natively within the crypto environment.

Unlike traditional tokenized securities, they are not weighed down by restrictive custody models or security classifications. Instead, they align with evolving regulatory regimes like the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework, which treats them as crypto assets.

This approach opens the door for AR tokens to function across DeFi protocols—used as collateral, traded on decentralized exchanges, and integrated into composable systems—while remaining compliant and secure.

Designing for Crypto from Day One

DeFi’s long-term success depends on its ability to anchor itself in the real economy. That requires more than just infrastructure; it requires assets that reflect the world we live in. The convergence of regulation , institutional interest, and blockchain maturity has created the conditions to bring RWAs on-chain in meaningful ways.

But to unlock that potential, tokenized assets must be built to function like crypto from the outset. AR tokens offer a path forward—not by mimicking TradFi, but by improving it—laying the foundation for a financial system that is more open, resilient, and interoperable.

About the Author: Michael Bar Zeev
Michael Bar Zeev
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About the Author: Michael Bar Zeev
In 2022, co-founded SHIFT — a platform bringing NASDAQ assets on-chain, enabling permissionless, 24/7 DeFi access to tokenized stocks and indices like SPX, TSLA, AAPL, and NVDA across protocols like Hyperliquid and Morpho. Born in 1979 in NYC, a lifelong gamer and early internet native, was a top BBS trader by age 12, self-taught designer by 14. In 2004, joined Playtech pre-IPO, helped manage iPoker, and at 26 created and was CEO of 2 poker schools, later sold to William Hill Online. In 2011 founded a computer vision company serving IKEA and Tesco, which received a $20M M&A offer from Google. Entered Web3 in 2017, as CEO of a non-custodial MPC wallet. Group was later acquired by Fireblocks for $100M. In 2020, co-founded Brandmark (JV with Emurgo, Cardano’s founding entity) to deliver blockchain traceability for RWAs, onboarding Carlsberg and engaging Walmart, Nestlé, and others. From 2021–2024, served as CTO of Tishrei Funds, which raised $200M in institutional capital.
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