Author: Vernacular Blockchain
In the fall of 2008, on the weekend when Lehman Brothers collapsed, Wall Street traders were packing boxes in their offices. Months later, a person using the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto inscribed the genesis block into the Bitcoin network, attaching a taunt: "The Chancellor is on the brink of a second bailout for banks."
That was a declaration of war on Wall Street. Seventeen years later, the tide has turned.
Most of those who declared war have dispersed, while Wall Street has instead walked the path they paved into the on-chain world. However, this time, they bring not speculative narratives, but treasury bonds, option contracts, and banking settlement systems.
Between 2025 and 2026, the global scale of tokenized assets surged over 220%. The BUIDL fund managed by BlackRock has stabilized its assets under management between $25 billion and $28 billion, becoming the anchor of the on-chain short-term U.S. Treasury market. Securitize is about to list on the NYSE with a valuation of $1.25 billion, while the NYSE itself has signed a memorandum of understanding to build a 24/7 stock clearing system on-chain.
Wall Street no longer wants the "decentralization" story. What they want is a set of compliant financial pipelines they can control, that generate yield, but this time, these pipelines are built on distributed ledgers.
01 Moving Treasury Bonds On-Chain: BlackRock and Securitize's Tokenization Empire
The design of the BUIDL fund is purely in the taste of traditional buy-side institutions.
Minimum investment of $5 million, open only to "Accredited Investors" as defined by U.S. law. Underlying assets are 100% allocated to cash, short-term U.S. Treasuries, and overnight reverse repurchase agreements, with Bank of New York Mellon as the custodian. No exposure to crypto assets whatsoever, as clean as a money market fund.
But it runs on-chain. Through Securitize's transfer agent infrastructure, BUIDL achieves daily dividend auto-reinvestment and 24/7 instant transfers. This has quickly made it the safest underlying reserve asset in the eyes of large on-chain protocols, derivatives clearinghouses, and synthetic dollar issuers.
More noteworthy is Securitize's own path to capitalization. In June 2026, the SEC announced that its merger registration statement with a SPAC affiliated with Cantor Fitzgerald had become effective. The pre-merger valuation was $1.25 billion, accompanied by $225 million in PIPE financing. The new company will list on the NYSE under the name "Securitize Corp." with the ticker symbol SECZ.
Simultaneously, the NYSE signed an MOU with Securitize in March, designating the latter as the first official transfer agent for its planned digital trading platform. This platform has grand ambitions: using the NYSE's existing matching engine plus a private blockchain to enable 24/7 trading, on-chain instant settlement, and stablecoin funding channels for U.S.-listed stocks and ETFs.
Nasdaq, across the street, has taken another path, choosing to overlay a tokenized trading layer on top of the traditional clearing system. The NYSE is building a brand-new on-chain trading and transfer system from scratch.
The technical routes of the two exchanges are diverging. This in itself speaks to one thing: Wall Street's core securities clearing function is migrating towards distributed ledger technology.
Meanwhile, the synthetic dollar protocol Ethena invested $250 million in the STAC fund issued by Securitize. This fund invests in AAA-rated collateralized loan obligations, deployed on the Solana chain.
Ethena's reason for doing this is straightforward: Its synthetic dollar USDe previously heavily relied on crypto derivatives arbitrage to maintain its peg. Once the market cooled and funding rates turned negative, yields would dry up. Now, floating rates from the traditional credit market provide its safety net.
The global CLO market exceeds $1.3 trillion. This capital is flowing into the reservoir of on-chain finance through the programmability of public chains.
02 Making Money Even if Bitcoin Doesn't Rise: BITA's Covered Call Magic
Bitcoin pays no interest and is highly volatile, which has kept pension funds and sovereign wealth funds away. Wall Street's solution: turn volatility itself into yield.
BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (ticker BITA) is expected to list around June 19, 2026. Its mechanism is not complex but quite ingenious.
The fund holds physical Bitcoin and BlackRock's own IBIT spot ETF as its underlying positions. IBIT has over $50 billion in assets under management, with excellent secondary market liquidity. On this foundation, the fund manager systematically sells short-term call options on IBIT, collects premiums, and after deducting the 0.65% management fee, distributes the proceeds to investors monthly in the form of cash dividends.
In essence, it trades the potential for Bitcoin's explosive growth for stable monthly income.
If Bitcoin trades sideways or dips slightly, BITA's performance will far exceed simply holding the spot asset, as the option premiums provide downside cushion and stable income. However, if Bitcoin surges sharply in the short term, exceeding the option strike price, the excess gains go entirely to the option buyer, and BITA holders only receive the capped return.
This resembles the fixed annuity products traditional financial advisors sell to retirees. Wall Street has stripped away Bitcoin's chaotic volatility and repackaged it into a standardized, income-generating asset that pays interest monthly.
Existing similar products like BTCI and YBTC offer coupon dividend rates as high as 27% to 41%, but suffer from shallow liquidity and significant basis risk, with their principal severely eroded during the past year's bull market. BlackRock's advantage lies in the $50 billion liquidity pool of its IBIT underlying asset, something other issuers simply cannot match.
Goldman Sachs isn't sitting idle either, planning to launch its own Premium Income product in early July. The fact that established investment banks are now in direct competition on the same track indicates this is no longer a pilot but a consensus direction.
03 Stablecoins Aren't Trading Tools, They're Cash Registers
Credit card payment experiences are smooth, but for a cross-border transaction from swipe to the merchant actually receiving funds, it often takes several days. The process passes through correspondent banks, clearing agents, and settlement cycles layer by layer, with fees being siphoned off at each step.
Stablecoins are changing this.
Stripe now accepts merchants in over 70 countries globally to receive payments directly via stablecoins. Consumers pay by scanning a wallet QR code, Stripe confirms instantly on Solana, Ethereum, or Polygon, and the backend handles forex and compliance checks through Bridge.xyz, which it acquired for $1.1 billion. Merchants can choose to receive USD or keep USDC. The entire process requires almost zero development cost for the merchant.
Mastercard has gone even further. The upgraded settlement architecture launched in June 2026 supports financial institutions using compliant stablecoins like USDC, PYUSD, RLUSD, etc., to execute card clearing intraday, on weekends, and on holidays across multiple mainstream public chains. Banks no longer have to wait for weekdays to settle.
Even SWIFT can't sit still anymore. The giant controlling global cross-border payment messaging released a roadmap for its Minimum Viable Product of a distributed "Shared Ledger" in March 2026, aiming to allow global commercial banks to directly manage tokenized deposits via a consortium blockchain, enabling 24/7 cross-border clearing.
This isn't about eliminating correspondent banks, but about solving a real pain point: To prevent settlement failures due to time zones and holidays, small and medium-sized banks globally have long frozen over $10 trillion in reserves at large correspondent banks.
The key enabler for all this happening is legislation. The GENIUS Act, signed into law in 2025, excludes compliant stablecoins from the definitions of securities and commodities, while making two key designs.
First, it prohibits stablecoins from distributing dividends to holders, firmly restricting them to the category of "pure payment instruments" to prevent the siphoning of bank deposits. Second, it mandates stablecoin issuers be brought under anti-money laundering regulatory systems, making dollar stablecoins an extension tool for the U.S. to expand the effectiveness of global financial sanctions.
No dividends, strong regulation, programmable. This is the stablecoin Wall Street wants.
04 Summary
Wall Street hasn't slowed down. They've just changed their path.
No more coin speculation, no more grand narratives of decentralization. On-chain, they are replicating an entire set of things they are familiar with: treasury bond funds, covered call options, card clearing networks, compliant transfer systems. Each product comes with hard yield, each pipeline is embedded with U.S. sovereign credit.
Blockchain fundamentalists once dreamed of replacing Wall Street with code. In the end, Wall Street learned to write code.





