The post The Definitive Bridge Between TradFi and On-Chain Realities appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The RWA Summit Hong Kong has come to an end—an excitingThe post The Definitive Bridge Between TradFi and On-Chain Realities appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The RWA Summit Hong Kong has come to an end—an exciting

The Definitive Bridge Between TradFi and On-Chain Realities

The RWA Summit Hong Kong has come to an end—an exciting event that has cemented the city’s status as the world’s leading center for real asset tokenization (RWA). These were two intense days when more than 700 carefully curated participants, 50+ distinguished speakers, and 80+ leading institutional investors gathered to map out the future of DePin, stablecoins, and the move toward bringing TradFi on-chain.

Rather than revisiting whether tokenization is viable, discussions focused on how it can be executed within credible legal, financial, and operational frameworks.

“RWA SUMMIT Hong Kong was not just another event for us, it was a place where real deals and business happened. We were proud to co-host the event and bring together potential partners, regulators and market leaders. It’s a great opportunity to present our bonds tokenization and DeFi projects to both TradFi and Digital Assets players. I believe that the key result of any event are the real deals that follow. RWA SUMMIT is definitely this kind of event. No noise, no hype, only real expertise of speakers, and a highly curated network”Peter Kadish, Managing Director LynxCap Investments, RWA SUMMIT Hong Kong co-host.

The RWA Summit clearly showed that tokenization has moved beyond theory into execution,” says Scott Thiel, co-founder & CEO of Tokinvest. “Across panels on venture capital, IP tokenization, and institutional adoption, the focus was on infrastructure, liquidity planning, and trusted market frameworks.

And this is how Gillian Wu, founder and CEO of Mulana Investment Management, comments on the insights of the event: “At the RWA Summit during Consensus Hong Kong, we explored how real-world assets are bringing wealth on-chain through greater efficiency, transparency, disintermediation, and fractionalized ownership. Tokenization, however, does not change the fundamental factors that influence value, and investors must carefully assess counterparty risk and liquidity. Although market fragmentation and structural differences between DeFi, exchanges, and traditional finance remain challenges, progress toward convergence is evident.

Day 1: Forging Regulatory Pathways and Institutional Momentum

The summit opened with remarks from Joseph Chan, Under Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury of the Hong Kong Government, who highlighted Hong Kong’s regulatory direction and its ambition to provide clarity for tokenized financial products. The message was consistent throughout the day: regulatory structure is no longer an obstacle but a prerequisite for scale.

The day included four spotlight sessions.

The first one was on global frameworks. The participants got a profound exploration of regional RWA trends, featuring insights from Scott Thiel (Tokinvest), Julian Kwan (InvestaX), and Terence Ng (EX.IO), expertly moderated by Peter Kadish (LynxCap). The takeaway? Regulation has evolved from a barrier into a strategic advantage.

Thereafter, we covered the AI convergence. Alan Lau (Animoca Brands) and Geoff Kot (Standard Chartered) delved into how artificial intelligence is revolutionizing the connection between traditional banking and digital asset ecosystems.

Another essential point was related to banking giants on-chain. Bugra Celik (HSBC) and Giorgia Pellizzari (Hex Trust) highlighted the transition from experimental proof-of-concept to full-scale institutional adoption, emphasizing robust custody and security for digital currencies.

The day concluded with a forward-looking exchange between Nenter Chow of Bitmart and Sébastien Borget of The Sandbox. They explored how crypto-native ecosystems are incorporating RWAs. The conversation centered on sustainable value creation rather than short-term market cycles.

“At the RWA Summit in Hong Kong, we discussed how blockchain is expanding from virtual real estate to collectible assets and user-generated content revenues being tokenized on-chain. The direction is clear: blockchain technology will become broadly adopted across gaming, digital assets, and the creator economy. It will ultimately integrate so seamlessly into user experiences that people benefit from it without needing to think about the underlying infrastructure,” shares Sébastien Borget, co-founder of SandBox & SandChain.

The first day also featured an outstanding lineup of industry leaders and innovators, including Cathal Donnellan, President at NexStox; Marcos Chow, Group CIO at HKT; Rocky Mui, Partner at Clifford Chance; Tom Wan, Partner at Imprint Capital Partners; Neil Tan, Managing Partner at Tsunami Advisors and Chairman of the AI Association of Hong Kong; Phillip Pon, CEO at EMURGO; Andrei Grachev, Managing Partner at DWF Labs; Musheer Ahmed, Founder & CEO at FinStep Asia; Jelena Zhang, SVP at Amber Premium; Jayendra Jog, Co-Founder at Sei Labs; Nikita (Sachdev) Lord, Founder & CEO at Luna PR; Edwin Mata, Co-Founder & CEO at Brickken; Preetam Rao, Co-Founder & CEO at QuillAudits; and Leo Fan, Founder & CEO at Cysic.

Day 2: Envisioning Tomorrow’s Wealth, IP, and Payment Innovations

The second day shifted toward applied use cases, examining how tokenization is reshaping wealth management, intellectual property, and payment systems.

The second day of RWA Summit opened with a high-level fireside chat featuring Sean McHugh, Senior Director – Market Assurance at VARA (Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority). The discussion set the tone for the day, focusing on regulatory clarity, market integrity, and the evolving framework for virtual assets in the region.

In a fireside discussion, Yat Siu of Animoca Brands and Bowie Lau of MaGE Group analyzed the implications of IP tokenization for content platforms and creator economies for giants like YouTube, Spotify, and Netflix. The conversation focused on whether blockchain-based models can provide more direct monetization and ownership structures while maintaining compliance and investor protections.

A recurring theme in our discussion was that RWA is not about “putting a single asset on-chain”; it’s about modernizing financial infrastructure without breaking law, trust, or market structure, comments Jeffrey Broer, venture advisor at Kohpy Ventures. “Tokenization within a regulated environment does not automatically create liquidity, and lower minimums do not mean retail access. True liquidity requires credible market design and participation. For venture-backed startups, the real opportunity lies in compliance-native infrastructure, settlement and orchestration layers, custody, risk tooling, and transparency rails. In short, the value is in building the plumbing, not chasing product hype.

Wealth migration onto blockchain infrastructure was addressed by Ray Tam of Revo Digital Family Office and Florian M Spiegl of Evident Capital. They tackled the hurdles of onboarding professional investor (PI) wealth onto the blockchain while unveiling exciting avenues for retail investors.

The next spotlight session of the day was on the PayFi Revolution. Rita Liu (RD Technologies) and Evan Auyang (Animoca Brands) offered a grounded perspective on stablecoins and payment finance in the “Asian Reality.”

The 2-day event concluded with a comparative discussion featuring Pauline Fan of InvestHK, Rachel Lee of Cyberport, and Irina Heaver of RWA Labs. The panel assessed Hong Kong’s regulatory agility against competitors like the UAE and beyond.

The stage then welcomed an exceptional lineup of investors, founders, and industry leaders, including Noah Frankel, Investment Analyst at JSquare; Tobias Bauer, General Partner at TBV; Calvin Ng, General Partner at Plutus VC; Melody He, Co-Founder & Partner at Spartan Group; Craig Dyer, Head of Capital Markets at HECTO; Pauli Speaks, CBDO at Cryptic; DiZien Low, Director of Business Development at Polygon Labs; Jacky Kong, Head of Hong Kong at Ava Labs; Sonia Shaw, CEO at OneAsset; Andrey Fedorov, CMO & CBDO at STON.fi; Jackee Wong, Partner & CMO at Leadsourcing; Sudeep Mehta, COO at STBL; and Lawrence Tsui, Director of Business Development and Strategic Solutions for Hong Kong & Mongolia at Fortinet.

Special thanks to the partners of RWA Summit, in particular our Strategic Partner, BTSE Enterprise Solutions, and our Partner, STON.fi, for their invaluable support and contribution to the event’s success.

Industry Developments and Expansion

Apart from panel discussions, the summit also provided a platform for industry announcements. LynxCap introduced its DeFi platform designed to connect RWA yield strategies with structured liquidity environments. In parallel, Ivan V. Ivanov of UVECON.VC and Irina Heaver of RWA Labs announced the launch of Dubai RWA Week 2026, signaling increased collaboration between Asian and Middle Eastern tokenization hubs.

RWA Summit Hong Kong brought together strong voices from both TradFi and digital assets,” says Ivan V. Ivanov, founder of RWA Summit. “The discussions focused on execution, regulation, and real market structure and were grounded in actual cases, not theory.

What stood out to me most was the growing alignment between ecosystems like Hong Kong and Dubai. Different frameworks—and clear potential for collaboration. Our goal was to create a platform where real experts share real cases, challenges, and practical paths forward. Judging by the depth of discussion, we are clearly moving in the right direction.

To sum it up, the RWA Summit Hong Kong 2026 has unequivocally demonstrated that the dialogue has advanced from “Is this feasible?” to “How swiftly can we expand?” By bridging TradFi’s regulatory rigor with DeFi’s tech stack, we’re moving toward a financial system that is actually transparent and accessible, not just fast.

Disclaimer: TheNewsCrypto does not endorse any content on this page. The content depicted in this Press Release does not represent any investment advice. TheNewsCrypto recommends our readers to make decisions based on their own research. TheNewsCrypto is not accountable for any damage or loss related to content, products, or services stated in this Press Release.

Source: https://thenewscrypto.com/rwa-summit-hong-kong-2026-the-definitive-bridge-between-tradfi-and-on-chain-realities/

Market Opportunity
Allo Logo
Allo Price(RWA)
$0.001882
$0.001882$0.001882
-0.94%
USD
Allo (RWA) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Will SEC Approve T. Rowe’s XRP-Inclusive Crypto ETF?

Will SEC Approve T. Rowe’s XRP-Inclusive Crypto ETF?

SEC to decide by Feb. 26, 2026 on NYSE Arca’s proposal to list T. Rowe Price’s Active Crypto ETF, which includes XRP exposure. The U.S. Securities and Exchange
Share
LiveBitcoinNews2026/02/19 13:00
What Are Crypto Narratives? Top 9 Narratives for 2026

What Are Crypto Narratives? Top 9 Narratives for 2026

Cryptsy - Latest Cryptocurrency News and Predictions Cryptsy - Latest Cryptocurrency News and Predictions - Experts in Crypto Casinos The world of cryptocurrency
Share
Cryptsy2026/02/19 13:09
August Crypto Market Review: ETH Leads the Rise, Institutional Funding and Macro Factors Dominate Market Trends

August Crypto Market Review: ETH Leads the Rise, Institutional Funding and Macro Factors Dominate Market Trends

By Jianing Wu , Galaxy Digital Compiled by Tim, PANews August saw various crossover signals between the macro economy and the crypto market. In traditional markets, investors faced conflicting inflation signals: the CPI released at the beginning of the month came in below expectations, but the subsequent Producer Price Index (PPI) came in above expectations. This was coupled with weakening employment data and growing market expectations that the Federal Reserve would begin cutting interest rates in September. At the end of the month's Fed meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Chairman Powell struck a dovish tone, emphasizing the "shifting balance of risks" brought about by rising unemployment, which reinforced expectations of a shift toward easing monetary policy. The stock market closed higher in a volatile session, with the S&P 500 fluctuating with the data releases. Defensive assets like gold outperformed at the end of the month. The crypto market reflected this macro uncertainty, with increased volatility. Bitcoin hit an all-time high of over $124,000 in mid-August before retreating to around $110,000, while Ethereum's gains for the entire month outpaced Bitcoin's. After experiencing its largest single-day outflow at the beginning of the month, Ethereum ETFs quickly attracted strong inflows, briefly surpassing Bitcoin's despite Ethereum's smaller market capitalization. However, the recovery in demand pushed ETH prices to a new high near $4,953, and the ETH/BTC exchange rate rose to 0.04 for the first time since November 2024. The fluctuations in ETF trading highlight that institutional position adjustments are increasingly influencing price trends, and ETH is clearly the leader in this cycle. In terms of laws and policies, regulators are gradually pushing forward reforms to reshape the industry landscape. The U.S. Department of Labor has opened the door to allocating crypto assets to 401(k) pension plans, while the U.S. SEC has explicitly stated that certain liquidity pledge businesses do not fall under the category of securities. Application trends at the market structure and institutional levels are deepening. Treasury Secretary Bessant disclosed for the first time that strategic Bitcoin reserves now hold between 120,000 and 170,000 coins, revealing the government's cumulative cryptocurrency holdings for the first time. Business activity is also accelerating: Stablecoin issuers Stripe and Circle announced plans to develop independent L1 blockchains, while Wyoming became the first state government in the US to issue a dollar-denominated stablecoin. Google also joined the enterprise blockchain fray with its "Universal Ledger" system. Meanwhile, crypto treasury companies continue to increase their asset allocation efforts. Overall, August reinforced two key trends. On the one hand, macro volatility and policy uncertainty triggered significant market volatility in both the equity and crypto markets; on the other, the underlying trend of market institutionalization is accelerating, from ETF flows to widespread adoption by sovereign institutions and corporations. These intertwining forces are likely to continue to dominate market movements as the autumn approaches, with the Federal Reserve's policy shift and ongoing structural demand likely setting the tone for the next phase of the cycle. 1. Spikes, Breakouts, and Reversals In the first half of August, Ethereum led the market, outperforming Bitcoin and driving a broad rally in altcoins. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index shows that Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $124,496 on August 13 before reversing course, closing the month at $109,127, down from $116,491 at the beginning of the month. A week later, on August 22, Ethereum broke through the previous cycle high, reaching $4,953, surpassing the November 2021 high of $4,866 and ending a four-year consolidation. Ethereum's strong performance is particularly noteworthy given its underperformance for much of this cycle. Since its April low near $1,400, the price of Ether has more than tripled, driven by strong ETF flows and purchases by crypto treasury firms. U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs saw net inflows of approximately $4 billion in August, the second-strongest month after July. In contrast, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows of approximately $639 million. However, despite a price decline in the last two weeks of August, Bitcoin ETF inflows turned positive. As market expectations for aggressive interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve grew, Bitcoin's store-of-value narrative regained focus. As the likelihood of a rate cut increased, Bitcoin's correlation with gold strengthened significantly that month. Besides ETFs, crypto treasury firms remain a significant source of demand. These firms continued to increase their holdings throughout August, with Ethereum-focused treasuries in particular injecting significant capital. Because Ethereum's market capitalization is smaller than Bitcoin's, corporate capital inflows have a disproportionate impact on spot prices. A $1 billion allocation to Ethereum can significantly impact the market landscape, far more than a similar amount allocated to Bitcoin. Furthermore, significant funds remain undeployed among publicly disclosed crypto treasury firms, suggesting further positive market conditions. The total cryptocurrency market capitalization climbed to a record high of $4.2 trillion that month, demonstrating the deep correlation between crypto assets and broader market trends. Rising expectations of interest rate cuts boosted risk appetite in both the stock and crypto markets, while ETF inflows and corporate reserve accumulation directly contributed to record highs for BTC and ETH. Despite market volatility near the end of the month, the interplay of loose macro policies, institutional capital flows, and crypto treasury reserve needs has maintained the crypto market's central position in the risk asset narrative. 2. Each company launches its own L1 public chain Favorable regulations are giving businesses more confidence to enter the crypto market directly. In late July, US SEC Chairman Paul Atkins announced the launch of "Project Crypto," an initiative aimed at promoting the on-chain issuance and trading of stocks, bonds, and other financial instruments. This initiative marks a key step in the integration of traditional market infrastructure with blockchain technology. Encouraged by this, businesses are breaking through the limitations of existing blockchain applications and launching their own Layer 1 networks. In August, three major companies announced the launch of new L1 blockchains. Circle launched Arc, which is compatible with the EVM and uses its USDC stablecoin as its native gas token. Arc features compliance and privacy features, a built-in on-chain foreign exchange settlement engine, and will launch with a permissioned validator set. Following its acquisitions of stablecoin infrastructure provider Bridge and crypto wallet service provider Privy, Stripe launched Tempo Chain, also compatible with the EVM and focused on stablecoin payments and enterprise applications. Google released the Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL), a private permissioned blockchain focused on payments and asset issuance. It supports Python-based smart contracts and has attracted CME Group as a pilot partner. The logic behind enterprise blockchain development boils down to value capture, control, and independent design. By owning the underlying protocol, companies like Circle avoid paying network fees to third parties and profit directly from transaction activity. Stripe, on the other hand, can more tightly integrate its proprietary blockchain with payment systems, developing new features for customers without relying on the governance mechanisms of other chains. Both companies view control as a key element of compliant operations, particularly as regulators increase their scrutiny of illicit financial activities. Choosing to build on L1 rather than L2 avoids being constrained by other blockchain networks in terms of settlement or consensus mechanisms. Reactions from the crypto-native community have been mixed. Many believe that projects like Arc and GCUL, while borrowing technical standards from existing L1 chains, are inferior in design and exclude Ethereum and other native assets. Critics point out that permissioned validators and corporate-led governance models undermine decentralization and user autonomy. These debates echo the failed wave of "enterprise blockchains" in the mid-2010s, which ultimately failed to attract real users. Despite skepticism, these companies' moves are significant. Stripe processes over $1 trillion in payments annually, holding approximately 17% of the global payment processing market. If Tempo can achieve lower costs or offer better developer tools, competitors may be forced to follow suit. Google's entry demonstrates that major tech companies view blockchain as the next evolutionary level of financial infrastructure. If these companies can bring their scale, distribution capabilities, and regulatory resources to this area, the impact could be profound. In addition to businesses launching their own Layer 1 chains, other developments reinforce the trend of economic activity migrating on-chain. U.S. Secretary of Commerce Lutnick announced that GDP data will be published on public blockchains via oracle networks such as Chainlink and Python. Galaxy tokenized its shares to test on-chain secondary market trading. These initiatives demonstrate that businesses and governments are beginning to embed blockchain technology into core financial and data infrastructure, despite ongoing debate over the appropriate balance between compliance and decentralization. 3. Hot Trend: Crypto Treasury Companies The crypto treasury trends we highlighted in our earlier report continue. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solver (SOL) holdings continue to accumulate, with Ethereum showing the strongest performance. Holdings data shows a sharp rise in ETH's crypto treasury throughout August, primarily driven by Bitmine's reserves, which increased from approximately 625,000 ETH at the beginning of August to over 2 million currently. Solver holdings also maintained steady growth, while BTC holdings continued their slower but steady accumulation. Compared to ETF fund flows, the activity of crypto treasury companies appears relatively flat. In July and August, ETF fund inflows were stronger than those of crypto treasury companies, and the cumulative balance of ETFs also exceeded the cumulative size of crypto treasury companies. This divergence is becoming increasingly apparent as premiums on crypto treasury stocks shrink across the board. Earlier this summer, price-to-earnings ratios for crypto treasury companies were significantly higher than their net asset values, but these premiums have gradually returned to more normal levels, signaling a growing caution among stock market investors. The stock price fluctuations are evident: KindlyMD (Nakamoto's parent company) has fallen from a peak of nearly $25 in late May to around $5, while Bitmine has fallen from $62 in early August to around $46. Selling pressure intensified in late August amid reports that Nasdaq may tighten its oversight of acquisitions of crypto treasury companies through stock offerings. This news accelerated the sell-off in shares of Ethereum-focused crypto treasury companies. Bitcoin-focused companies, such as Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy, ticker symbol: MSTR), were less affected because their acquisition strategies rely more on debt financing than equity issuance. 4. Hot Trend: Copycat Season Another hot trend is the rotation into altcoins. Bitcoin's dominance has gradually declined, from approximately 60% at the beginning of August to 56.5% by the end of the month, while Ethereum's market share has risen from 11.7% to 13.6%. Data indicates a rotation out of Bitcoin into Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies, which aligns with the outperformance of Ethereum ETFs and inflows into crypto treasury firms. While Bitcoin ETF inflows have rebounded in recent weeks, the overall trend remains unchanged: this cycle continues to expand beyond Bitcoin, with Ethereum and altcoins gaining incremental market share. 5. Our views and predictions As markets head into the final weeks of September, all eyes are on the Federal Reserve. Labor market weakness is solidifying expectations of a near-term rate cut and reinforcing risk assets. The jobs report underscores that the economic slowdown may be deeper than initially reported, raising questions about how much easing policy will be needed to cushion the economy. Meanwhile, the long end of the yield curve is flashing warning signs. Persistently high 10-year and 30-year Treasury yields reflect market concerns that inflation may be sticky and that fiscal pressures may ultimately force central banks to finance debt and spending through money printing. Expectations of short-term interest rate cuts are driving a rebound in risky assets, but the tug-of-war between short-term support from rate cuts and long-term concerns pushing yields and precious metals higher will determine the sustainability of this rebound. This conflicting dynamic has a direct impact on cryptocurrencies: Bitcoin's correlation with gold as a store of value and hedge is growing, while Ethereum and altcoins remain more sensitive to shifts in overall risk appetite.
Share
PANews2025/09/18 17:40