Just caught an interesting take from JPMorgan's tokenization team on why asset tokenization alone won't solve everything. Oliver Harris made a solid point - while the tokenization news cycle keeps hyping this as the silver bullet for liquidity problems, the real story is way deeper than just putting things on-chain.



The actual transformation happening isn't really about tokenization itself. It's about completely rebuilding the backend financial infrastructure that's been holding everything back. Think outdated settlement systems, fragmented data layers, legacy custody solutions - that's where the real bottleneck sits. Tokenization is more like the visible symptom of what needs to change underneath.

What caught my attention though is Harris's observation that we're finally at a point where both the tech and regulatory frameworks are mature enough to actually execute on this. That's the key shift. For years, tokenization remained mostly theoretical because the supporting infrastructure and regulatory clarity just weren't there. Now they are.

So the tokenization news people should really be watching isn't about individual tokenization projects launching - it's about the institutional-grade infrastructure getting rebuilt. That's where the real value creation happens. The tokenization layer is just the interface; the backend modernization is the actual game-changer.

Interesting to see how this plays out across different asset classes. Some industries are already moving faster than others on this kind of infrastructure overhaul.
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