Today I want to talk about something different—not those hotly debated projects, but a direction that seems dull but is actually being done with real effort: how to securely bring real-world securities onto the blockchain.



Honestly, this topic has been hyped for years, but most of it is just pie in the sky. Minting a token is very easy; just press a button and it's done. But whether legal compliance, asset custody, clearing and settlement, and audit systems can all be fully addressed—that's the real measure of whether a project is worth paying attention to. Recently, I’ve been watching some projects' latest moves in this area and feel that some ideas are finally coming together.

Let's start with the most painful reality: why are institutional funds so reluctant to go on-chain? I’ve summarized it into three points—compliance approval, privacy protection, and reliable custody. If any one of these links breaks, institutional money won’t flow in. Currently, most public blockchains do well with liquidity and composability, but once it involves "how to meet compliance requirements while protecting business secrets," they often throw up their hands. Private chains can solve compliance issues, but their ecosystems are isolated, and liquidity is fragmented, so the effect is limited.

This is why some projects' approach can catch my eye—they don’t just obsess over technology; they treat compliance processes themselves as a product to refine. Most notably, they have deep cooperation with a certain regulated exchange. Don’t underestimate this step: that exchange holds a genuine regulatory license and serves real investors, not just a paper partnership. Bringing compliant securities onto the chain through standard processes essentially digitizes and automates the traditional exchange’s business workflows, while leveraging the privacy and audit advantages of blockchain. If this step can be successfully implemented, it’s no longer just a technical experiment but a real change to the market structure.
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MoonMathMagicvip
· 10h ago
Compliance licenses are really the bottleneck. After watching so many projects fail here, Institutional funds can't flow in because no one dares to truly cut through with the three main tools; there are too many superficial collaborations. Finally, someone is not just hyping up technology but refining the process as a product. I respect this approach.
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CryptoPhoenixvip
· 10h ago
Ah, finally someone has clarified this matter. Compliance is the true moat. The bear market has repeatedly taught me how to evaluate projects. Now, the only standard is whether they have actually interacted with regulatory authorities. Institutional funds will come in sooner or later. During the bottom range, it's time to see who is genuinely working. Institutional money doesn't lie; it only trusts compliance and custody. Once this part is established, our opportunity will come. Speaking of which, this is the mindset needed to navigate cycles—don't chase concepts, focus on whether the real processes can be implemented.
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FortuneTeller42vip
· 10h ago
Haha, finally someone is telling the truth. Compliance is really the most useless part, most projects are just pretending to sleep. This deep integration with exchanges is indeed different, but I still want to see how they handle those gray areas. By the way, do institutions really risk compliance to ensure on-chain privacy? It still feels too idealistic. I agree, but I'm just worried it might turn into another empty idealism movement. Hey, if this logic works out, how much impact would it have on existing CEXs? Actually, I'm more concerned about the clearing and settlement part. If something goes wrong, it could be a big problem. The idea of compliance processes as a product is somewhat awakening, but how many can truly be implemented? Don’t let it turn into another PPT governance.
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SleepTradervip
· 10h ago
Wow, this is the real deal, not those shitcoins that are hyped up every day.
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SneakyFlashloanvip
· 10h ago
Reliable compliance methods are finally being taken seriously, this is the real deal. Those who only know how to mint tokens should step aside.
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SchroedingerGasvip
· 10h ago
Compliance is really the bottleneck here. Everyone is talking about on-chain securities, but there are very few who can truly get the legal framework sorted out.
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