- Larry Fink is bullish on tokenisation.
- The trend is set to accelerate in 2026.
- A lack of infrastructure and regulations could hold it back.
Updating the financial system to run on blockchain technology is “necessary,” and promises to slash fees and boost accessibility for investors.
That’s the case BlackRock CEO Larry Fink made while speaking on a World Economic Forum panel in Davos, Switzerland on Wednesday alongside Citadel CEO Ken Griffin and European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde.
Tokenisation is the process of converting ownership rights of assets like real estate, stocks, or bonds into digital tokens on a blockchain. Proponents argue doing so will speed up finance, reduce costs and provide more accountability.
“We would be reducing fees, we would do more democratisation,” Fink said. “[If] we have one common blockchain, we could reduce corruption.”
For Wall Street titans like BlackRock, tokenisation presents a huge opportunity.
Much of the core underlying software the global financial system runs on is between 40 and 60 years old. Because of this, it is often clunky and slow, and depends on costly intermediaries.
Updating it to a blockchain-based system could make those who pioneer the change a lot of money.
BlackRock isn’t the only one who’s bullish on blockchains.
“Blockchain is the future for traditional banking,” said Sergio Ermotti, CEO of UBS, at the World Economic Forum earlier this week. “You will see a convergence.”
Ripple and Boston Consulting Group predict blockchain tokenisation will swell into a $19 trillion industry by 2033, while asset manager Grayscale forecasts a thousand-fold growth of tokenised assets, pushing their combined value to $35 trillion by 2030.
Modest progress
Despite all the tokenisation hype, progress has so far been modest.
Investors have poured more than $22 billion into tokenised assets, but adoption has been limited to a couple of key areas. US Treasury bonds are the biggest tokenised asset, accounting for around $9.3 billion, while commodities, like tokenised gold receipts, make up nearly $4 billion.
This year could be when the trend expands and accelerates.
“In 2026, the tokenised assets market becomes broader, deeper, and significantly more institutional,” Philipp Pieper, co-founder of tokenisation platform Swarm Markets, previously told DL News.
Tokenisation has already scored a big win. On Monday, the New York Stock Exchange announced it will launch a tokenised securities trading platform with stablecoin funding, instant settlement, and 24/7 trading.
Another big benefit of tokenisation, according to Fink, is security.
Blockchains, unlike the current centralised financial system, can be decentralised, meaning no single entity has control over who can send funds, or has privileged access to data.
In other words, everyone using the blockchain plays by the same hard-coded rules. This creates an even playing field that’s appealing to both investors and asset managers alike.
“We have more dependencies on maybe one blockchain — which we could all talk about,” Fink said. “But that being said, the activities are probably processed and more secure than ever before.”
Moving too fast?
For Fink, however, tokenisation could be progressing faster in the US.
“It’s ironic that we see two emerging countries leading the world in the tokenisation and digitisation of their currencies — that’s Brazil and India,” he said.
It may be the case that the infrastructure needed to make tokenisation work at scale hasn’t caught up yet.
“Tokenised assets exist and can trade, but they lack the depth, distribution, and data reliability that institutional capital requires,” Laurens Fraussen, a research analyst at Kaiko, said in a January 20 report.
Then there’s the Clarity Act, a broad crypto market structure bill passing through the US Senate.
It will likely reduce uncertainty around tokenised assets, and many experts expect this to accelerate adoption as more institutions gain confidence to issue and trade them.
The bill was previously predicted to pass into law before the end of 2025. It faced more delays last week after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said his exchange would not support it.
Armstrong argued certain provisions enable a “de facto ban on tokenised equities,” and would give the government unlimited access to crypto user’s financial records.
“We’d rather have no bill than a bad bill,” Armstrong said in a social media post on January 14.
Tim Craig is DL News’ Edinburgh-based DeFi Correspondent. Reach out with tips at tim@dlnews.com.








