Recently, the landscape has been quite active, with hot topics in the crypto world like the rise and fall of BTC, the surge in Rune and Stone tokens, and the buzz around meme-coins. Additionally, discussions around Bitcoin ETFs have drawn significant attention.
Internationally, issues such as the ongoing Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Palestine conflicts, recent assassinations in Saudi Arabia and Slovakia, and the crash of the Iranian president’s helicopter add to the chaos of 2024.
The decoupling of China and the U.S. is a reality, and the trends in international conflicts highlight a move towards multipolarity. This shift will lead to a restructuring of the global monetary system. As globalization gives way to a multipolar regional strategy, digital currencies will become crucial, inevitably linked to the physical world.
Meanwhile, more traditional institutions, especially on Wall Street, are discussing the future trend of tokenization. The future will see the physical world being tokenized. However, this future requires time, and the popularization, education, and transformation of inclusive populations into this system need the actual emergence of RWA. The RWA track includes the tokenization of centralized traditional finance, decentralized native tokenization, and potentially newer and more radical approaches.
Bitcoin ETFs’ development momentum already indicates the RWA track’s direction. Only by connecting with financial institutions and industrial capital in the physical world can significant changes in scale and new incremental users be achieved. Following the trends of Rune and memecoin, many believe the next sustainable hot topic will be the RWA track.
According to ROOTDATA’s RWA track project list, most current projects focus on DeFi product models using traditional financial products as yield-generating collateral assets, lacking genuine RWA tokenized products.
Figure1. ROOTDATA’s RWA Track Projects
Since the 2023 Hong Kong Web3 Conference and the introduction of new virtual asset regulations, especially the launch of Type 7 licensed virtual asset trading platforms and security token regulations, many believe Hong Kong will become the core hub for RWA.
As mainland funds transition, there is natural optimism towards this direction due to the abundance of high-quality corporate assets and resources from securities firms, funds, and insurance capital. Therefore, there has been close attention and communication since last year with licensed brokers, asset management companies, and exchanges in Hong Kong and even offshore exchanges. However, reality does not meet the high expectations— “the ideal is full, but the reality is thin.”
We have summarized a future strategy for RWA in Hong Kong: “Compliance for institutions, tokens for retail, and linking stock and token products.”
Licensed and compliant RWAs rely on licensed exchanges for the tokenization of financial products, mainly focusing on debt or equity designs. These will be conservative and inclined towards traditional financial institutions and regulatory models, primarily targeting the institutional market (2B), with moderate issuance scale but weak liquidity, representing corporate financing attributes.
Non-licensed and compliant RWAs, relying on offshore RWA exchanges or alternative investment OTC, Swap exchanges, will tokenize physical assets, avoiding equity designs and integrating native token models to bypass traditional securities regulation. These will mainly target the retail market (2C), with flexible issuance scale, leveraging token economic models to pursue liquidity, representing retail investment (speculative) attributes.
The success of Hong Kong’s RWA lies in:
How to achieve the transformation from the 2B market to the 2C market?
This is not about capability, but whether traditional financial institutions and vested interest groups are willing to decentralize or be revolutionized. The current Hong Kong Web3 ecosystem, although loudly promoted, is essentially a power struggle among regulatory bodies and traditional financial interest groups. For instance, the current Hong Kong Bitcoin spot ETF, a promising RWA product, has turned out poorly because it was not granted to licensed virtual asset exchanges but remains in the traditional HKEX, with old financial players dividing the pie, resulting in low trading volume and minimal ecosystem drive.
Without revolution or innovation, Hong Kong’s licensed and compliant RWA products will end up the same. Licensed virtual asset exchanges will only be OTC for RWA product transactions and redemptions, with the core still lying in the interests of brokers, asset management, and institutional markets.
Principle 1: RWA product design can have more innovation. Although currently packaged as traditional financial products and then tokenized, they can be further innovated in OTC or ATS, similar to GameFi, where games are played in the game but incentives are in the finance. Security product tokenization might lack liquidity, so liquidity incentives can be created externally.
The conservatism of licensed compliance for RWA (or STO) in Hong Kong might surprise you. Many assume that with exchange licenses issued and regulations in place, one can start moving quickly.
However, the reality is more cautious. For securities token issuance under Hong Kong’s licensed compliance, the asset package must first issue a fund, requiring a Type 9 asset management license. Then, issuing and underwriting RWA products need a Type 1 brokerage license (typically held by securities firms) that collaborates with Hong Kong financial institutions for distribution. RWA products, generally equity-based, must be traded on a Type 7 licensed exchange. Non-licensed exchanges in Hong Kong are gradually restricted from listing security tokens.
Many are interested in the Hong Kong RWA/STO issuance process. Here’s a detailed breakdown:
Unlike the licensed compliance mode of virtual asset exchanges and security tokenization, there is a relatively aggressive or innovative native token mode. This mode is based on common law alternative investment regulations, avoiding equity-based designs, and directly tokenizing physical assets or digital certificates of physical assets. These non-security tokens are issued on offshore RWA exchanges or alternative investment OTC, Swap exchanges, with issuance models borrowed from token economic models. The scale can be large or small, targeting the retail market with natural liquidity, combining cash flow or market activities to manage market value.
Non-licensed exchange modes involve complex aspects like RWA asset issuance, trading, leverage and derivatives, and liquidity, to be discussed in another article. Here’s a brief overview of the non-security RWA token product design.
Principle 2: Design RWA products focusing on the real-world platform, not corresponding to physical assets but platform governance or utility tokens.
Principle 3: The limited and unlimited space of RWA tokenization.
RWA token principle: “Preferably useless but sounds useful, generally not used.”
In conclusion, the future of RWA is promising, potentially beyond the discussed modes. Due to the article’s length, further detailed discussion can happen in a Space or live session. Whether it’s licensed compliant exchanges’ RWA products, alternative investment exchanges’ RWA tokens, or combined with listed companies, the essence is following the most energetic assets, funds, and people. Looking at Bitcoin spot ETF data and development, it becomes clear why RWA could be the next sustainable and long-term hot track!
Recently, the landscape has been quite active, with hot topics in the crypto world like the rise and fall of BTC, the surge in Rune and Stone tokens, and the buzz around meme-coins. Additionally, discussions around Bitcoin ETFs have drawn significant attention.
Internationally, issues such as the ongoing Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Palestine conflicts, recent assassinations in Saudi Arabia and Slovakia, and the crash of the Iranian president’s helicopter add to the chaos of 2024.
The decoupling of China and the U.S. is a reality, and the trends in international conflicts highlight a move towards multipolarity. This shift will lead to a restructuring of the global monetary system. As globalization gives way to a multipolar regional strategy, digital currencies will become crucial, inevitably linked to the physical world.
Meanwhile, more traditional institutions, especially on Wall Street, are discussing the future trend of tokenization. The future will see the physical world being tokenized. However, this future requires time, and the popularization, education, and transformation of inclusive populations into this system need the actual emergence of RWA. The RWA track includes the tokenization of centralized traditional finance, decentralized native tokenization, and potentially newer and more radical approaches.
Bitcoin ETFs’ development momentum already indicates the RWA track’s direction. Only by connecting with financial institutions and industrial capital in the physical world can significant changes in scale and new incremental users be achieved. Following the trends of Rune and memecoin, many believe the next sustainable hot topic will be the RWA track.
According to ROOTDATA’s RWA track project list, most current projects focus on DeFi product models using traditional financial products as yield-generating collateral assets, lacking genuine RWA tokenized products.
Figure1. ROOTDATA’s RWA Track Projects
Since the 2023 Hong Kong Web3 Conference and the introduction of new virtual asset regulations, especially the launch of Type 7 licensed virtual asset trading platforms and security token regulations, many believe Hong Kong will become the core hub for RWA.
As mainland funds transition, there is natural optimism towards this direction due to the abundance of high-quality corporate assets and resources from securities firms, funds, and insurance capital. Therefore, there has been close attention and communication since last year with licensed brokers, asset management companies, and exchanges in Hong Kong and even offshore exchanges. However, reality does not meet the high expectations— “the ideal is full, but the reality is thin.”
We have summarized a future strategy for RWA in Hong Kong: “Compliance for institutions, tokens for retail, and linking stock and token products.”
Licensed and compliant RWAs rely on licensed exchanges for the tokenization of financial products, mainly focusing on debt or equity designs. These will be conservative and inclined towards traditional financial institutions and regulatory models, primarily targeting the institutional market (2B), with moderate issuance scale but weak liquidity, representing corporate financing attributes.
Non-licensed and compliant RWAs, relying on offshore RWA exchanges or alternative investment OTC, Swap exchanges, will tokenize physical assets, avoiding equity designs and integrating native token models to bypass traditional securities regulation. These will mainly target the retail market (2C), with flexible issuance scale, leveraging token economic models to pursue liquidity, representing retail investment (speculative) attributes.
The success of Hong Kong’s RWA lies in:
How to achieve the transformation from the 2B market to the 2C market?
This is not about capability, but whether traditional financial institutions and vested interest groups are willing to decentralize or be revolutionized. The current Hong Kong Web3 ecosystem, although loudly promoted, is essentially a power struggle among regulatory bodies and traditional financial interest groups. For instance, the current Hong Kong Bitcoin spot ETF, a promising RWA product, has turned out poorly because it was not granted to licensed virtual asset exchanges but remains in the traditional HKEX, with old financial players dividing the pie, resulting in low trading volume and minimal ecosystem drive.
Without revolution or innovation, Hong Kong’s licensed and compliant RWA products will end up the same. Licensed virtual asset exchanges will only be OTC for RWA product transactions and redemptions, with the core still lying in the interests of brokers, asset management, and institutional markets.
Principle 1: RWA product design can have more innovation. Although currently packaged as traditional financial products and then tokenized, they can be further innovated in OTC or ATS, similar to GameFi, where games are played in the game but incentives are in the finance. Security product tokenization might lack liquidity, so liquidity incentives can be created externally.
The conservatism of licensed compliance for RWA (or STO) in Hong Kong might surprise you. Many assume that with exchange licenses issued and regulations in place, one can start moving quickly.
However, the reality is more cautious. For securities token issuance under Hong Kong’s licensed compliance, the asset package must first issue a fund, requiring a Type 9 asset management license. Then, issuing and underwriting RWA products need a Type 1 brokerage license (typically held by securities firms) that collaborates with Hong Kong financial institutions for distribution. RWA products, generally equity-based, must be traded on a Type 7 licensed exchange. Non-licensed exchanges in Hong Kong are gradually restricted from listing security tokens.
Many are interested in the Hong Kong RWA/STO issuance process. Here’s a detailed breakdown:
Unlike the licensed compliance mode of virtual asset exchanges and security tokenization, there is a relatively aggressive or innovative native token mode. This mode is based on common law alternative investment regulations, avoiding equity-based designs, and directly tokenizing physical assets or digital certificates of physical assets. These non-security tokens are issued on offshore RWA exchanges or alternative investment OTC, Swap exchanges, with issuance models borrowed from token economic models. The scale can be large or small, targeting the retail market with natural liquidity, combining cash flow or market activities to manage market value.
Non-licensed exchange modes involve complex aspects like RWA asset issuance, trading, leverage and derivatives, and liquidity, to be discussed in another article. Here’s a brief overview of the non-security RWA token product design.
Principle 2: Design RWA products focusing on the real-world platform, not corresponding to physical assets but platform governance or utility tokens.
Principle 3: The limited and unlimited space of RWA tokenization.
RWA token principle: “Preferably useless but sounds useful, generally not used.”
In conclusion, the future of RWA is promising, potentially beyond the discussed modes. Due to the article’s length, further detailed discussion can happen in a Space or live session. Whether it’s licensed compliant exchanges’ RWA products, alternative investment exchanges’ RWA tokens, or combined with listed companies, the essence is following the most energetic assets, funds, and people. Looking at Bitcoin spot ETF data and development, it becomes clear why RWA could be the next sustainable and long-term hot track!