Standard Chartered Bank (LON: STAN) has recently initiated coverage on Uniswap‘s governance token UNI, projecting an ambitious price target of $100 by the end of 2030. This forecast, released in mid-June 2026, represents one of the more optimistic outlooks from a major financial institution regarding a decentralized finance (DeFi) asset. Currently trading around $2.70 to $2.80, the prediction implies roughly a 35- to 40-fold increase over the next four and a half years.
Analysts at the bank, led by Geoffrey Kendrick, global head of digital assets research, position Uniswap as a foundational infrastructure layer in the evolving on-chain economy.
They anticipate substantial growth in tokenized real-world assets—such as securities, stablecoins, and other financial instruments—migrating into decentralized platforms.
According to their projections, the total value locked in DeFi could expand significantly, reaching approximately $2.7 trillion by 2030, driven by a nearly 37-fold increase in tokenized assets actively used within these ecosystems.
Uniswap’s automated market maker (AMM) model, established brand recognition, and liquidity provisions are seen as key advantages that could allow it to capture a sizable share of this activity.
The bank‘s detailed price trajectory outlines gradual milestones: approximately $6.50 by the close of 2026, climbing to $20 in 2027, $40 in 2028, $65 in 2029, and finally $100 in 2030.
This path is framed as potentially outperforming major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum over the same period.
Supporters point to recent integrations, including institutional products like BlackRock‘s BUIDL fund appearing on Uniswap’s extended protocols and tokenized versions of major equities flowing through the platform.
However, such long-term forecasts for UNI must be viewed with considerable caution.
Unlike shares in publicly traded companies such as Coinbase, which derive value from tangible revenue streams, operational businesses, regulatory compliance frameworks, and audited financial performance, UNI functions primarily as a governance token in a decentralized protocol.
Its value is not anchored to consistent cash flows, dividends, or traditional corporate metrics.
Instead, it depends heavily on network participation, tokenomics incentives, community governance decisions, and broader market sentiment in the highly volatile cryptocurrency sector.
Crypto assets like UNI lack the structural ties to underlying profitable enterprises that characterize equities.
Trading volumes, speculative interest, regulatory shifts, and competition from other decentralized exchanges can dramatically influence prices, often independent of fundamental utility.
Uniswap faces ongoing challenges, including rivalry from specialized trading venues, potential regulatory hurdles around tokenized assets, and the necessity to sustain developer and user engagement through its token-linked mechanisms.
Past cycles have shown that even strong protocols can experience prolonged drawdowns when hype fades or macroeconomic conditions tighten.
While institutional interest in tokenization and on-chain finance is growing, translating that into sustained UNI appreciation remains uncertain.
Investors should treat these projections as speculative scenarios rather than reliable guidance.
The DeFi space continues to innovate, but it operates in a regulatory gray area with elevated risks compared to traditional financial markets.
Standard Chartered’s analysis adds to the conversation around DeFi’s maturation, yet it underscores the fundamental differences between crypto tokens and established corporate securities. It’s now quite likely that some of the more prudent participants will weigh these views against the inherent unpredictability of digital asset markets.