Tokenised assets used to look like a niche experiment. Now
Cas Abbé
Updated at: 7 hours ago
{"content":"Tokenised assets used to look like a niche experiment.
Now they're slowly becoming more common on Polygon in ways that seem more serious than flashy. Projects are quietly turning short-term government bonds, stable envelopes, and real yield products into tokens.
Verification, bridges, and custody are all part of the stack. AlloyX's RYT fund is a good example. It is fully tokenised, backed by real money market instruments, and held by Standard Chartered (HK).
The most important thing is how Polygon's infrastructure supports it: quickly settling, being able to be combined with other things, and being cheap. The fact that you can use RYT within DeFi protocols shows how the network is evolving from “just scaling” to “hosting real capital.” These changes change how people think about DeFi. Instead of "yield farms" being the default, more money might go to regulated yield, which is backed by things people know about. Polygon is basically bringing real-world balance sheets to Web3.
I think the next wave will be funds, treasuries, and short-term products for institutions coming into Polygon's ecosystem.
People may start to think differently about crypto once they see reliable real yields work on-chain. Crypto will no longer be just speculation; it will be a part of capital markets.
#Polygon $POL @0xPolygon ","images":[],"tags":[],"tradingPairs":["POL/USDT"],"quotearticleid":0}