As real-world assets (RWA) gradually move from proof-of-concept to structural development, the focus of market discussion is shifting: once assets are tokenized, do they truly meet the conditions to enter the core system of on-chain finance?
Recently, Matrixdock, the RWA platform under Matrixport, officially released "Matrixdock Outlook 2026: Building the Reserve Layer for the On-Chain Economy," systematically elaborating its framework for judging the evolution of the next phase of on-chain financial infrastructure and disclosing its vision and strategic path for 2026.
From "Asset On-Chaining" to the "Reserve Layer": Tokenization is Entering its Second Phase
In the Outlook, Matrixdock clearly states: Tokenization is entering its second phase, and it considers whether an asset possesses balance sheet compatibility as one of the key dimensions for measuring the maturity of on-chain assets.
If the first phase addressed "whether real-world assets can be represented on-chain," then the second phase must answer a more challenging question—can on-chain finance truly host institutional-grade balance sheets, regulated capital, and a trust system that operates across cycles? This judgment implies that the core of tokenization is no longer just technical feasibility, but whether the assets possess the conditions to be incorporated into institutional balance sheets for long-term holding, management, and allocation.
Based on this judgment, Matrixdock further elaborates and systematically defines the positioning of this foundational asset layer as the "On-Chain Financial Reserve Layer": a foundational asset layer composed of regulated, high-quality, verifiable tokenized assets, used to anchor value, support liquidity, and operate stably across different market cycles.
Matrixdock emphasizes that tokenization technology alone is insufficient to support institutional-grade applications. What truly determines whether on-chain finance can achieve scale is asset quality, legal structure, custody and audit arrangements, and whether these assets can be continuously used by institutions as balance sheet-level assets under real market conditions.
2026 Vision: Building a "Reliable Reserve Layer" for On-Chain Finance
Centered around this core judgment, Matrixdock presents its overall vision for 2026 in the Outlook:
To build a "Reserve Layer" composed of high-quality, regulated assets for on-chain finance, making it a foundational asset system that institutions can rely on.
Matrixdock breaks down this vision into four long-term supporting elements:
- Transparency: Clear asset backing relationships, auditable custody frameworks, and independent third-party attestation are prerequisites for institutional trust and compliance scaling;
- Trust Mechanism: Assets need to support scalable minting, redemption, and trading across different jurisdictions and market cycles;
- On-Chain Intelligence: Reserve assets should be natively compatible with on-chain finance and gradually integrate into automated, intelligent treasury and risk management processes;
- Institutional-Grade Experience: For institutions, clarity, predictability, and operational simplicity are as decisive as returns in the adoption decision.
Matrixdock states that its focus is not on short-term market hype, but on building an on-chain asset foundation that can be relied upon long-term by institutions and operates stably across different cycles.
Strategic Path: Connecting Institutions and On-Chain Finance with "Reserve-Grade Assets"
In terms of strategic positioning, Matrixdock emphasizes that it is not a general-purpose tokenization platform, but rather focuses on the critical tier where reserve-grade assets reside—situated below the application layer and above the underlying assets, connecting regulatory approval, liquidity, and institutional trust. As of early 2026, Matrixdock has primarily brought two types of assets with the strongest liquidity and highest institutionalization level in the global financial system on-chain: short-term U.S. Treasuries (STBT) and gold (XAUm).
The Outlook points out that these two asset types play different roles on-chain: STBT is designed as an institutional-grade on-chain cash equivalent for treasury management, settlement, and collateral scenarios; while XAUm is positioned as a first-class reserve asset in on-chain finance, rather than simply a "digital gold representation."
Building on this, Matrixdock notes that institutional-grade trust is not determined by technology alone, but is built collectively by custodians, regulators, industry organizations, market makers, and distribution channels. Its future growth focus will also be more evident in its distribution network, institutional adoption scenarios, and cross-jurisdictional availability.
Focused on Long-Term Structure, Not Short-Term Narratives
The development of on-chain finance is no longer a question of "if" it will happen, but rather what assets and structures will drive it. As regulatory frameworks gradually clarify and institutional participation deepens, only those assets that can withstand the tests of transparency, compliance, and cyclical resilience, and be incorporated into the balance sheet management systems of institutions, have the potential to become part of the on-chain financial infrastructure.
Matrixdock states that its focus for 2026 is not on the quantitative rapid expansion of assets, but on promoting the scaled implementation of reserve-grade assets within the on-chain financial system in a prudent, transparent, and long-term manner.






