Author: LateNeverr1
Compiled by: Deep Chao TechFlow
I started mining in 2014 and switched to ETH when it launched in 2015. I've seen it all since then: the DAO hack, the ICO craze, DeFi Summer, the Terra collapse, Celsius, FTX.
After enough cycles, you stop getting excited about "new" narratives. Most of them are just the same thing returning under a different name. Liquidity mining became points mining, ICOs became IDOs.
RWA feels different, and I don't say that lightly.
It's not just another way of moving capital around on-chain, but bringing yields from assets that have never been on-chain before onto the chain. This doesn't mean it solves all problems, many projects are vaporware, but the fundamentals behind this sector are more solid than most project whitepapers.
Things I check before touching any RWA project:
- Whether the lending business existed before the token appeared. Maple's founders have a traditional credit background. 8lends was launched based on a platform that had been doing offline P2P lending for years. I value this more than tokenomics or headline APRs.
- Whether defaults are explained clearly or covered up. The Goldfinch incident in 2023 was a lesson for the entire sector. Real credit risk will surface eventually, and anyone pretending it won't isn't worth your time.
I maintain small positions in a few projects just to observe their performance. Most of my holdings are still in ETH and validation nodes.
If you're new, one thing to understand clearly:
Over-collateralized lending like Aave involves instant liquidation, while RWA lending involves slow recovery from real-world assets, which can take months. These are two completely different types of risk.
Ultimately, it's largely about moving old-fashioned credit work onto a new track. The difficult part has never been the blockchain.
Selected Comments:
Careful_keklin: I entered in 2017, and after Celsius, my criteria for screening projects are similar to yours. The most important point for me is whether default scenarios are clearly documented somewhere or glossed over lightly. Most RWA protocols I checked in 2022-23 couldn't even explain their own recovery processes clearly, which speaks volumes. Goldfinch's outcome was inevitable for this model, not an exception.
be_boss: Completely agree, especially that "test of real business before the token." The ICO era relied on whitepapers, DeFi Summer on APY, 2022 on "we are compliant." The signature phrase of each cycle looks rigorous until the next one starts. Those that survive each round of shuffling are basically the teams that had credit businesses running off-chain before launching a token. That point about Goldfinch is spot on—default is the real stress test, not TVL. A team's reaction the first time something goes wrong says more than a year's worth of data dashboards. "Old credit on a new track" is so accurate; the smart contracts were never the hard part.






