Or are there valuable outputs with these projects?
Every once a while, you'll find naysayers who'd rather get struck by lightning than embrace innovations. It doesn't come as a surprise that a lot of people are skeptical about real world assets (RWAs) tokenization and some see it as “not innovative enough” to be considered an improvement of the present markets of these assets.
A fun fact about this is that we can't generally fault these individuals because many times, their conclusions come from a place of ignorance.
Firstly, what even is tokenization?
Tokenization is the process of converting something of value—whether physical, digital, or abstract—into a digital token that can be stored, transferred, or traded on a blockchain or similar digital system. — ChatGPT
The keywords to note are “something of value.”
—Precious metals
—Real estate
—Private credits
—Stocks
—Bonds
All of these are something of value. Sometimes, like most recently, we can see projects moving to tokenize RWAs that are essentially baskets of investments into other real world assets (RWAs).
The tokenization of money market funds is a perfect example of this, and Goldman Sachs and BNY have recently been reported to be preparing to offer institutional investors access to said tokenized RWAs.
Why would anyone think of it all to not be a major innovation?
Why does the idea of tokenizing real world assets (RWAs) fail to appeal to these individuals?
Why should it be considered a case of buzzwords for crypto projects to make money off of?
We can answer these questions quite easily as it all comes down to ignorance. We have to point out that there are two sides of individuals sharing these sentiments. On one side, we have the anti-crypto ring that simply hates anything that has to do with crypto and blockchain technology. Then on the other side, we have the crypto natives that simply doubt these developments to be net positive.
Both sides, however, mostly base their arguments on one thing:
