The post Beyond Speculation: Crypto Projects with Real-World Infrastructure (RWA) to Watch appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
When BlackRock launched its BUIDL tokenized money market fund in 2024, and Franklin Templeton brought its OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund to public blockchain rails, the signal was unambiguous: institutional capital has arrived.
According to RWA.xyz and the RedStone/Gauntlet research team, the total value of tokenized real-world assets on-chain crossed $15 billion by December 2024 and surpassed $35 billion by November 2025. Boston Consulting Group projects this market could reach $16 trillion by 2030, driven by institutional adoption and improvements in blockchain infrastructure.
The shift is clear – the crypto speculative cycle is no longer the story. Capital is increasingly moving toward infrastructure that connects digital markets with real-world financial assets and institutions. These are the six projects building that foundation.
1. Chainlink – Verification and Interoperability at Scale
Chainlink occupies a critical position in the infrastructure stack. Its Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (CCIP) has emerged as a core connectivity layer for institutional tokenized finance. SWIFT, the messaging network connecting 11,500+ banks globally, selected CCIP to enable cross-chain settlement of tokenized assets. The collaboration moved to live production in November 2025.
Other project’s partnerships include experiments with institutions such as ANZ Bank and Fidelity International. The significance lies in standardization: if tokenized assets scale across different blockchains and custodial systems, a shared verification and messaging layer becomes essential.
By year-end 2025, Chainlink’s platform had secured more than $100 billion across DeFi. It also holds ISO 27001 certification and SOC 2 Type 1 attestation – metrics that compliance teams care about.
2. Ondo Finance – Tokenized Treasuries at Scale
Ondo Finance focuses on bringing traditional fixed-income products on-chain. Its flagship OUSG product gives qualified investors on-chain exposure to short-term U.S. Treasury securities. By late 2025, OUSG held over $820 million in assets. Ondo’s TVL crossed $2.75 billion by March 2026.
The majority of OUSG’s underlying assets are held in BlackRock’s BUIDL fund. In September 2025, Ondo expanded into tokenized equities through its Global Markets platform, reaching approximately 60% market share in tokenized equities to become the largest provider of tokenized Treasuries and stocks globally.
Ondo’s institutional partnerships include JPMorgan and Mastercard.
3. Centrifuge – Eight Years of Real-World Credit Infrastructure
Centrifuge was tokenizing invoices, mortgages, and structured credit before the term “RWA” entered the crypto mainstream.
Founded in 2017, it was the first protocol to use a real-world asset as collateral for a decentralized stablecoin (MakerDAO’s DAI), the first to launch an RWA lending market on Aave, and the first to build a fully on-chain fund securitization with BlockTower Capital. According to the project’s overview documentation, Centrifuge financed more than $250 million in assets through its ecosystem.
By March 2026, its TVL surpassed $1 billion. Centrifuge was selected as one of three winners in Spark’s $1B Tokenization Grand Prix – alongside BlackRock/Securitize and Superstate – receiving a $200M allocation for its JTRSY Treasury fund. The protocol also holds a partnership with S&P Dow Jones Indices. Its V3 architecture now spans six EVM chains.
4. Maple Finance – On-Chain Credit After Doing the Hard Part
Maple Finance focuses on institutional credit. The platform operates as an on-chain lending marketplace connecting vetted borrowers with capital from crypto-native and institutional lenders. After restructuring its risk framework following the market disruptions of 2022, Maple relaunched with a stronger underwriting model and secured lending products.
From under $100 million in early 2024, the protocol scaled to over $4 billion in TVL by late 2025. Its institutional borrower base grew from 4 to 28 counterparties during 2024, while institutional allocators expanded fifteen-fold to approximately 800. In March 2025, Bitwise – managing $12+ billion in assets – joined as a borrower.
Maple’s trajectory reflects a broader shift in crypto lending. Early models prioritized speed and yield. The newest approach emphasizes transparency, collateral discipline, and borrower screening. That shift is key to rebuilding institutional trust.
5. RealT – Fractional Property Ownership, Global Reach
RealT approaches RWA from the perspective of property ownership. The platform tokenizes U.S. rental properties as ERC-20 tokens, each property held inside its own LLC. Token holders receive weekly rental distributions in stablecoins, with no custody requirements or paperwork.
Launched in 2019, the platform now holds over 600 properties across seven U.S. states, with 65,000+ registered investors from 125+ countries. RealT has distributed more than $24 million in rental income to investors since launch.
6. Goldfinch – Crypto Capital in Emerging Markets, Evolving
Goldfinch expands the RWA concept beyond developed financial markets. The protocol routes DeFi capital to real-world lenders in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America without requiring crypto collateral. By 2023, it had deployed over $100 million in loans across more than 30 countries.
After experiencing three credit defaults, including a $5.9 million loss from borrower Lend East in April 2024, Warbler Labs restructured the model. Goldfinch Prime now connects DeFi capital to institutional private credit managers including Ares and Apollo, each with 10+ years of track record.
This reflects a genuine lesson: the thesis of on-chain capital in underserved markets is sound, but it requires institutional underwriting discipline to function.
Arena Two: RWA Logic Applied to Sports
Arena Two takes a different angle on the same shift. The platform runs a decentralized sports competition model on Base, where the $ATWO token powers voting rights, governance, and ecosystem access.
Its flagship event – the Arena Two 2026 World Series – is a global 6-a-side football league across 8 teams and 8 cities, with an $8 million prize pool. Team leaders include MMA champion Khabib Nurmagomedov. The project is led by CEO Omar Rahim, a former Binance senior executive with 20+ years in global finance, and advised by Keith Wyness, former CEO of Everton and Aston Villa.
The model follows the same logic as RWA adoption: replacing passive participation with verifiable, on-chain ownership. Their audience already thinks in terms of performance metrics and long-term asset value – the same framework that makes tokenized infrastructure worth paying attention to.
The shift from narrative to infrastructure
The growth of tokenized real-world assets points to a structural change in how blockchain networks interact with the financial system – one that spans government debt markets, cross-border credit, asset verification, and fractional ownership.
For investors looking beyond market cycles, the projects worth following are those building systems capable of supporting real economic activity. The next stage of crypto adoption will likely come from that intersection.
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