As real-world assets (RWA) gradually become a significant narrative direction in the cryptocurrency industry, the market's focus is undergoing a noticeable shift: discussions are no longer centered on "which assets can be tokenized," but are instead turning to a more practical question—which assets truly have the potential to operate successfully on-chain in the long term and achieve stable scale.
In the recently published "My Crypto Predictions for 2026," crypto trend observer Jay Yu listed Tokenized Gold as one of the most certain asset directions in the future development of RWA. In his predictive framework, tokenized gold is no longer seen as an edge experiment but is instead included in discussions at a more core asset level.
This judgment is not based on short-term market hype but stems from gold's inherent "starting conditions." As an asset that has long been accepted by the global financial system, gold has a mature custody, auditing, and clearing system. This means that when gold takes on an on-chain form, the real issue to solve is not "whether the asset is real or fake," but how to lower the barriers to holding and transferring it, and to achieve cross-regional and more efficient use.
From a practical perspective, physical gold lacks good liquidity in many scenarios. Cross-border transfers are costly, circulation efficiency is low, and there are operational and regulatory restrictions in some jurisdictions. In contrast, the on-chain form gives gold the possibility of "flowing like a digital asset" for the first time, making it easier to incorporate into the crypto financial system and asset portfolios. This is a key reason why researchers consider it one of the most likely RWA assets to succeed first.
The macro environment has further amplified this trend. Against a backdrop of geopolitical uncertainty, inflationary pressures, and sovereign debt issues, the market is refocusing on the core function of "value storage." Gold's traditional safe-haven attributes are once again brought to the forefront, and the tokenized form allows this attribute to directly enter on-chain scenarios for the first time, reaching more crypto users and institutions.
It is worth noting that discussions around tokenized gold are shifting from focusing on conceptual feasibility to testing actual operational conditions. The market is becoming more concerned with: How is physical gold custodied? Is reserve information verifiable? How are on-chain and off-chain data aligned? And whether the system has the capacity for long-term operation under different compliance environments.
Under this trend, some platforms that have built underlying infrastructure around gold tokenization early on are gradually entering the industry's spotlight. For example, Matrixdock, the RWA platform under Matrixport, launched the gold token XAUm, which is tokenized based on physical gold that meets LBMA standards, with a focus on underlying capabilities such as physical custody, on-chain verifiability, and long-term compliant operation. This approach emphasizes the improvement of infrastructure and system-level capabilities rather than merely staying at the transaction product level.
From a broader perspective, the next phase of RWA is no longer just about competing for issuance scale but is gradually evolving into a systematic test of asset selection, system stability, and long-term sustainability. The reason tokenized gold is frequently mentioned is that it presents a relatively clear and verifiable intersection between asset maturity, real-world demand, and on-chain usability.
Report source: https://x.com/0xfishylosopher/status/2003830142330900513?s=46







