Title: Can RWAs catch up with Stablecoins ? Post by: Firstfrost on September 08, 2025, 10:48:17 AM Tokenized assets have reached approximately $300B with stablecoins been the majority at $267B in circulation while tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) like have grown to $26B mostly adopted by institutions.
That industry is growing with but obviously stablecoins is the backbone because they move constantly for trading, payments and more but most RWAs are still and not often used in DeFi. Even though RWAs do offer yield, they are not as fluid as Stablecoins. This I think might result in slow adoption and I don't see them meeting up stablecoins. RWAs might win in rank up in value but will they ever move like stablecoins do ? What’s your opinion ? Title: Re: Can RWAs catch up with Stablecoins ? Post by: asriloni on September 08, 2025, 04:24:01 PM Even though RWAs do offer yield, they are not as fluid as Stablecoins. This I think might result in slow adoption and I don't see them meeting up stablecoins. RWAs might win in rank up in value but will they ever move like stablecoins do ? What’s your opinion ? There will always be symbiote mutualism between RWA and stablecoin. Yeah, stablecoin has been spreading so fast compared to the RWA. However, holding it is not as profitable as holding RWA, right? More platforms are allowing you to borrow stablecoin by collateralizing your RWA. That means more integration between both will benefit more to the stable coin and RWA users. Also i suggest you to read these articles. https://investor.visa.com/news/news-details/2024/Visa-Introduces-the-Visa-Tokenized-Asset-Platform/default.aspx https://www.ubs.com/global/tc/media/display-page-ndp/en-20241101-first-tokenized-investment-fund.html It will give you insight about how big the adoption is going to happen with RWAs. It's only matter of time as RWA is a sleeping narrative. Just wait until it wakes up. Title: Re: Can RWAs catch up with Stablecoins ? Post by: gluedog on September 11, 2025, 05:10:50 PM Stablecoins and RWAs do different jobs, stables are the money leg/settlement rail with high velocity; RWAs are yield-bearing claims (T-bills, credit, gold) with heavier KYC/redemption friction, so lower velocity. "Catch up" depends on the metric--RWAs could rival stables in market cap if tokenized treasuries scale, but they won't match stablecoin payment/trading flow. The unlocks for DeFi are clear: 24/7 mint/redeem, strong oracles/NAV, bankruptcy-remote structures, and collateral factors that don't punish composability.
Curious: which RWA segment are you actually watching, T-bill tokens, gold, or private credit? What single change would make you use RWAs in DeFi tomorrow, instant redemption, higher yield, or better collateral treatment? And in stress events, what matters most to you: issuer risk, oracle risk, or exit liquidity? Title: Re: Can RWAs catch up with Stablecoins ? Post by: d5000 on September 12, 2025, 12:58:51 AM Apart from these RWAs who can offer a profit (yield) by simply holding them, for me some classes of RWAs could be interesting to create "your own non-USD stablecoin", as a kind of insurance against inflation.
RWAs based on commodities fitting basic needs like like oil or tokenized edibles (soybeans, wheat ...) often move up also when the inflation in e.g. the USD "currency area" is growing. You could then build your own "basket currency" with several RWAs, based on those commodities you've a personal interest in, or you think they could be representative for the goods you will need in your life. Title: Re: Can RWAs catch up with Stablecoins ? Post by: Hispo on September 13, 2025, 10:56:37 PM RWAs tokens are rather an evolution of the market or those assets rather a direct competition against stable coins, in my opinion.
People who have stable coins won't directly jump onto Real world assets tokens in order to save their money from inflation or in order to sent money overseas, in the same manner it is done with USDT and USDC. The targeted public for real world assets tokens in people living in developing countries who have no access to centralized markets and still wish to invest some of their money in stocks and commodities. If real world assets start to get widespread on popular blockchains I am very interested on getting some of my money into stocks and metals, for the sake of improving yield in the long term, all of that without having an account with a stock broker within the United States of America or the European Union. Title: Re: Can RWAs catch up with Stablecoins ? Post by: Abiky on September 15, 2025, 06:31:23 PM Tokenized assets have reached approximately $300B with stablecoins been the majority at $267B in circulation while tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) like have grown to $26B mostly adopted by institutions. That industry is growing with but obviously stablecoins is the backbone because they move constantly for trading, payments and more but most RWAs are still and not often used in DeFi. Even though RWAs do offer yield, they are not as fluid as Stablecoins. This I think might result in slow adoption and I don't see them meeting up stablecoins. RWAs might win in rank up in value but will they ever move like stablecoins do ? What’s your opinion ? As far as I know, stablecoins are a form of "Real World Asset" representing the value of Fiat on the Blockchain (whenever it's USD, EUR, RUB, etc). I don't see what's the difference here. But if the OP is comparing RWAs such as precious metals, real estate, and stocks against stablecoins, then that's another subject. These could very well surpass stablecoins' market cap in the future. The "fun" hasn't even started yet. Once giants like NASDAQ, BlackRock, S&P 500, etc start "tokenizing" assets on the Blockchain, things will change for the better. Now the real question lies in which Blockchain will be the one used mostly for RWAs? Will it be Ethereum, Solana, or the XRP Ledger? Or maybe they'll live across multiple chains? That's the "multi-million" dollar question. If I have to guess, companies will launch RWAs on the Ethereum blockchain. BlackRock did express its interest in doing this some time ago. I'd pay close attention to the recent developments in the industry to see what happens. |