There's an interesting dynamic playing out right now. When major institutions like NYSE move into blockchain, the narrative gets pushed that it somehow validates the entire sector—benefiting everyone's chains equally. But that's not quite how it works in practice.



Look at the track record: private blockchains have consistently struggled to achieve real adoption. They lack network effects, face governance challenges, and ultimately can't compete with the credibility of truly decentralized networks. It's a structural problem that won't disappear just because a traditional finance player enters the space.

Here's what actually happens when institutional-grade blockchain infrastructure finally gains traction—it doesn't lift all boats evenly. Instead, it creates a bifurcated market: one tier for enterprise systems, another for public networks. The real question isn't whether NYSE's blockchain helps crypto. It's whether the momentum from traditional finance eventually filters down to strengthen the entire ecosystem. The early evidence suggests it's more complicated than the current hype suggests.
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