In an editorial on January 4th, this newspaper pointed out that stablecoins could become a control tool disguised as innovation. Just half a month later, the digital asset market has undergone a major change. This time, it is not the government but traditional finance centered around Wall Street that has taken the stage in the blockchain arena.
Recently, the most discussed keyword in global financial markets is “tokenization.” The domestic discussion of security tokens (STO) is only part of this trend. In the global market, the migration of large-scale traditional assets such as government bonds, corporate bonds, and funds to blockchain is in full swing. This is not merely the launch of new products but a move aimed at restructuring the financial infrastructure itself.
Interpreting this change as a failure of digital assets is not accurate. On the contrary, the fact that traditional finance is beginning to accept blockchain means that this technology is no longer just an experimental edge but has reached a stage with practical utility. The issue is not the entry itself but who sets the rules and what values are preserved.
On the blockchain infrastructure built over the past decade of the digital asset industry’s “decentralization” banner, the first to appear are major Wall Street financial institutions like BlackRock or Franklin D. Roosevelt. They have no interest in the rebellious philosophy or financial sovereignty symbolized by Bitcoin; they selectively leverage the practical advantages offered by public chains, such as efficiency, transparency, and cost savings.
As a result, tokenization is less a tool for expanding Web3 ideals and more about optimizing the backend infrastructure of traditional finance. The original spirit of permissionless innovation is gradually becoming blurred, replaced by regulatory compliance and institution-centered structures. Many blockchain projects are also adjusting their goals, shifting from expanding individual freedom to meeting institutional investor needs.
This trend is not necessarily all negative. The more financial markets integrate into the mainstream system, the less volatile they become, and the clearer the rules are. The high-risk, high-reward speculative phase may weaken, but the potential for a long-term sustainable profit structure is increasing. The question is, in this change, what position individuals and industries choose to take.
For readers, what matters is not the ideological division of “decentralization or not,” but the ability to understand which assets are operated under what regulations, by whom, and where the profits ultimately belong within this structure. Digital assets are no longer marginal speculative objects but are transforming into a core axis of financial structural reform.
Wall Street’s entry is not the end of the digital asset market but a watershed. If this change is only viewed through moral debates or camp logic, the dominant power will naturally fall into others’ hands. Whether digital assets merely become data centers for traditional finance or serve as the foundation of a new financial order depends on the choices made now.
The chessboard has already been laid out. The key is who will set the rules on it and who will merely serve as infrastructure providers. Without an answer to this question, it will be difficult to qualify for discussing future financial dominance.
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