RWA don hit $30B as tokenized utility don turn di next catalyst

Tokenized Real-World Assets (RWA) don don pass $30B, dem don climb well since 2025 because regulatory things clear pass and e dey easier to get on-chain yield. One estimate put RWA market cap for $30.2B+ (from about $5.8B for the start of 2025), with tokenized US Treasurys dey lead the growth reach over $15B. Latest breakdown show say RWA mix dey highly concentrated: bonds make 60.2% (≈$16B), precious metals 21.6%, and private credit 9.9%—all together about 92% of the market. This show demand strong pass where yield and collateral use cases don already clear. Looking ahead, coverage dey shift from “more tokenization” to “real usability.” RWA growth fit slow once the easier capital inflows don enter, and the next phase go depend if tokenized equities, funds, and private credit fit scale beyond Treasurys and commodities. Traders suppose focus on how RWA products integrate into wider crypto strategies—liquidity, composability, and collateral efficiency—so RWA no go just dey sit as idle on-chain wrappers. Key point for traders: the RWA boom real, but the trading catalyst likely na improved utility not just headline TVL.
Bullish
Both articles dey agree say RWA market dey expand quick and regulatory momentum (like Europe MiCA) dey improve institutional access—things wey normally support steady inflows. Di latest data still show say RWA segment don get proper scale, wit tokenized bonds, metals, and credit dey make most of di market, weh dey confirm near-term demand. But di newer piece add warning: growth fit slow down if RWA tokens no become active useful building blocks inside different crypto strategies. Dat one change market focus from headline issuance/TVL to practical metrics (liquidity, composability, collateral efficiency). Even if dis fit calm speculative hype, e no cancel di bullish background; e just point where traders fit find better follow-through. Net effect for di RWA theme na bullish, wit upside likely concentrated for products wey improve real-world yield access and trading usability rather than pure “wrapped” exposure.