A recent analysis from blockchain intelligence firm Chainalysis spotlights the accelerating adoption of tokenized real-world assets (RWAs). These digital tokens represent traditional financial instruments—such as bonds, stocks, real estate, and commodities—issued and traded directly on blockchain networks. The development marks a shift toward more efficient financial infrastructure, promising round-the-clock market access, near-instant settlements, and sharply lower costs by minimizing intermediaries.
Chainalysis also indicated that regulatory tailwinds have played a pivotal role. The GENIUS Act, enacted in July 2025, created a clear federal framework for payment stablecoins and laid groundwork for on-chain capital markets.
Updated rules on digital asset custody and reporting have further encouraged institutions to allocate capital at scale.
As a result, blockchain’s built-in transparency now allows real-time tracking of asset flows and counterparties, aligning seamlessly with compliance and risk-management priorities.
This wave of institutional interest represents a departure from earlier crypto cycles, where retail investors typically led the charge.
Overall, the tokenized RWA sector is nearing $30 billion in total assets under management.
Growth has been steady since early 2024, with a noticeable pickup in the second half of 2025 following regulatory clarity.
Data from aggregator rwa.xyz tracks both liquid instruments and less-traded physical holdings, though valuations for illiquid assets rely on estimates rather than continuous trading.
Among consumer-facing categories, tokenized commodities stand out as the most popular, while U.S. Treasury products dominate overall market size.
Speed of growth varies sharply by asset class. Institutional-grade categories such as asset-backed credit reached $1 billion in market value in just 6.1 months from first issuance.
Specialty finance followed in 21.5 months, and tokenized commodities took 36.2 months.
Stocks have yet to hit that milestone. These timelines underscore how quickly large financial players can deploy capital once technical and legal hurdles are cleared.
On Ethereum—the leading network for RWAs—nearly 400,000 distinct addresses now hold these tokens.
A striking pattern has emerged: the share of brand-new wallets (less than six months old) receiving their first RWA jumped in late 2025 and early 2026.
Institutional products like tokenized private funds and asset-backed credit are held almost exclusively by purpose-built wallets that receive tokens within days of creation.
In contrast, consumer categories such as commodities and stocks remain more common among older, crypto-native addresses active for months or years.
This suggests RWAs are serving as a primary on-ramp for institutions entering blockchain markets.
Trading behavior is also maturing. Chainalysis examined $40.5 billion in cumulative volume for tokenized gold and tracked its 45-day rolling correlation with the traditional SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) ETF.
Historically, on-chain gold volumes showed little or negative correlation with GLD, often moving with crypto liquidity instead of macroeconomic signals.
Since the second quarter of 2025, however, correlations have climbed above 0.70 and stayed elevated into 2026—closely mirroring the established link between GLD and gold-mining equities.
As liquidity deepens, on-chain commodities increasingly reflect traditional market dynamics, potentially allowing institutions to apply familiar risk models and hedging strategies.
The research findings from Chainalysis now point to a broader transformation. Early movers integrating tokenized assets into their operations stand to capture significant market share as investor participation expands.
Chainalysis concluded that while challenges remain—particularly around illiquid asset valuations and occasional volatility in smaller on-chain markets—the trajectory is clear. Blockchain rails are becoming a core part of mainstream finance.