The enterprise ecosystem is shifting from conceptual exploration to production-grade deployment. At the recent Cointelegraph Connect (Cannes Edition) panel, “The RWA Roadmap: Regulation, Limitations, and the Future of Tokenized Finance,” EEA Executive Director Redwan Meslem joined a distinguished group of industry leaders to outline precisely what infrastructure is required to bring trillions in traditional assets on-chain.
Moderated by Aleksandra Fetisova (Head of BD, 1inch), the discussion featured insights from Joachim Lebrun (Chief Blockchain Officer, Tokeny), and Arthur Katz (CIO, OneAsset).
Enterprises are no longer questioning the need for tokenization. With the global money supply over $130 trillion and the derivatives market exceeding $600 trillion, the focus has shifted to how this infrastructure meets compliance, custody, and standardization requirements. The following is a strategic framework for institutional adoption.
The Reality of Enterprise Assets
For years, the market assumed that tokenization alone would drive demand.
In reality, institutional adoption depends on high-quality assets with clear, built-in yield. Moving poorly structured assets on-chain does not create enterprise liquidity. The focus must remain on underlying value, such as fractionalized commercial real estate, where asset quality drives adoption. Tokenizing strong assets unlocks capital efficiency, for example, enabling a 70% loan-to-value collateralized loan against commercial property in 30 seconds. Technology enables this process, but is not the product itself.
Evolution of the Primary Book of Record
The market structure is undergoing a critical shift. Enterprises are moving away from siloed, shadow-ledger systems. For example, Apex Group, an asset servicer managing $3.5 trillion and connected to $8 trillion globally, recently committed to bringing $100 billion in assets on-chain within 12 months. Institutions now use Ethereum as the primary ledger for high-value assets. This demonstrates institutional Ethereum in practice.
Institutional confidentiality is no longer a barrier to on-chain execution. Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) now enables EVM computation on encrypted data.
This advancement allows strict regulatory compliance without exposing proprietary financial positions to public networks. It delivers the privacy guarantees required by regulated financial markets.
The Coordination Imperative: Composable KYC
Infrastructure alone does not ensure market velocity. As Redwan Meslem stated during the panel: “Money makes money when money moves.” Without active distribution, trust, and buying pressure, tokenized assets risk becoming idle liquidity isolated on-chain.
The fundamental bottleneck for enterprise asset management today is composable identity and KYC integration across silos. If an asset is approved and verified by one institution, the ecosystem needs unified standards to allow instant recognition by others. Bridging these isolated liquidity pools is essential to accelerating enterprise adoption. This requires systemic coordination.
The Future of Infrastructure is Invisible
The ultimate success of real-world asset infrastructure will be its invisibility. In the future, tier-one banks, global asset managers, and custodians will not discuss settlement rails or standard protocols. They will simply trade assets securely and efficiently across global networks.
The Enterprise Ethereum Alliance is actively coordinating this future. By uniting standard creators, technologists, and traditional institutions, we are establishing the neutral platform needed to build a unified, compliant on-chain economy.
Learn more about how the EEA is driving standards and adoption for institutional Ethereum at entethalliance.org.
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