In brief
- Superstate CEO Robert Leshner believes tokenizing cars, houses, and especially stocks will drive mainstream adoption of blockchain technology
- Tokenization converts real-world assets into digital tokens on the blockchain, enabling faster transactions and programmable smart contracts
- Successful tokenized Treasury funds like BlackRock’s BUIDL ($2.3B) demonstrate growing institutional interest in on-chain traditional assets
Itβs going to take some cars and houses to get users really keen on tokenization, Superstate founder and CEO Robert Leshner told Decrypt.
Leshner noted that tokenizing those large physical assets would widen awareness, although applying the process to stocks would supercharge adoption.
βWhen you start to say, like you own the stock, you can self-custody the stock, you can bring it to a DeFi protocol and you can borrow against it. And you can take that money and buy a car or buy a house and leave the system entirely with itβI think thereβs going to be a lot of really happy investors,β he said.
Tokenization refers to taking real-world assets, like U.S. treasuries, stocks, or gold, and turning them into a digital token thatβs on the blockchain. The asset itself doesnβt change, but turning it into a token helps it move faster and makes it programmable by way of smart contracts.
Successful tokenized Treasuries include BlackRockβs iShares BUIDL fund, which has amassed $2.3 billion; Franklin Templetonβs BENJI fund, which manages $846 million; and Ondoβs OUSG and USDY products, which manage a combined $1.4 billion.
Leshner firstΒ splashed into the crypto industry in 2017 when he founded Compound Labs, one of the earliest Ethereum DeFi lending protocols. Heβs since become CEO and co-founder of Superstate, a firm focused on building the infrastructure that moves more traditional financial assets on chain through tokenization.
For example, the company recently helped tokenize the shares of Nasdaq-traded Solana Company and Galaxy Digital on its Opening Bell platform.
βFrankly, the ability to use financing in new ways is incredibly appealing,β he said. βAnd not being told the only thing you can do is buy more stocks at your broker dealer, right?β
The other use case he highlighted as exciting, but still βunderexplored,β is portability. Although there are already systems in place to help an investor move shares between different firms, theyβre not great, he said.
βIf I want to just move a share to you because itβs your birthday and I want to put a share in your account, itβs actually really hard,β Leshner said. βThereβs weird solutions that have been built over the years, like stock gift cards, but stock is not really portable.β
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Author: Stacy Elliott
