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This is the fifth article in the Future of Investing series, drawing insights from our annual industry-wide survey, The Future of Investing.1 The Overview summarizing the top 10 key findings can be found here along with a series of articles, each exploring a key finding in more depth.

Preview

“ETF-ization” of assets is likely to be the first step on the pathway to real-world asset tokenization

However large and widespread the cost and efficiency advantages of adopting new technology, current technology and systems are too entrenched to be replaced wholesale. This is limiting the ability of the industry to tokenize “real world assets,” i.e., traditional assets, such as equities, bonds and funds. Instead, based on feedback from survey respondents, we anticipate a multi-stage pathway to the migration of exposures, processes and ultimately instruments to tokenized forms able to run on blockchain rails. While the end goal will be to move toward an ecosystem where tokenized assets are exchanged on the same rails as digital currencies, there will likely be several intermediate steps. This pathway will be marked by key milestones in the coming years as shown in the following exhibit and unpacked in this article.

Envisioned Pathway to New Financial Ecosystem

Source: Franklin Templeton Industry Advisory Services. For illustrative purposes only.

The first stage—the “ETF-ization” of the industry—is already underway, but as the new crypto-inspired infrastructure is being built and regulations being defined, there is likely to be a growing push to place more assets into exchange-traded fund (ETF) wrappers. As noted in Optimizing portfolio returns with new investing models, ETFs are being used to facilitate the efficient transport of sets of securities or assets and allow non-traditional assets to be processed and commingled in portfolios with traditional offerings. This can be seen as a steppingstone toward the even greater portability that tokenization would enable.

ETFs can be created under a variety of regulatory guidelines and offer significant flexibility. BlackRock—the world’s largest ETF provider—recently bought Preqin, the leading private markets data provider,2 which could enable the creation and embedding of exclusive indexes into new types of private asset ETF exposures. State Street Global Advisors and Apollo Global Management announced a proposal for an ETF that invests in both public and private credit. A proposal for a private credit collateralized loan obligation ETF was put forward just a few days later by BondBloxx, a credit-oriented ETF issuer.3

As noted earlier, there are also already a variety of exchange-traded products (ETPs) that provide exposure to gold and other commodities. The SPDR Gold Trust ETF and iShares Gold Trust ETF have over US$100 billion in assets according to data from ETF.com.4 The Investment Company Institute estimates that total net assets held in commodity ETPs more than doubled in the last four years.5

The inclusion of spot bitcoin into an ETP wrapper in 2024 resulted in the most successful launch of a new ETP ever in January 2024.6 Nine months later, the total market cap across the top 11 offerings totaled more than US$49 billion.7 In September 2024, the US Securities and Exchange Commission approved the listing and trading of options for Blackrock’s spot bitcoin ETP (iShares Bitcoin Trust).8

One of the keys to enabling new types of ETF products is the ability to track ownership of the underlying assets that are being held in the vehicle. Today’s securities processing infrastructure provides a ready ecosystem to facilitate such tracking for equities and bonds. As more types of assets are included in ETFs, however, the challenge grows. The ability to identify the holder or custodian of the actual asset and the ability to verify its safekeeping are critical. Already, the launch of spot bitcoin and Ethereum ETPs has forced traditional financial institutions to add new crypto-enabled partners into their operations. For these structures, the actual supplies of spot cryptocurrency are being held in custody in cryptographically protected wallets on blockchain to help track the underlying assets and provide “proof of holdings.”

This is an important milestone in how today’s financial ecosystem operates. Collaborations across crypto-native firms and traditional financial organizations are yielding important lessons for the industry and for regulators on the mechanics of the new blockchain-affiliated technologies. It is creating real-time use cases that introduce new concepts such as “dusting” into the industry’s vernacular. This is a new type of account attack where unknown entities send tiny amounts of cryptocurrency known as dust to a cryptographically protected wallet to uncover the identity of the wallet’s owner. Learning to identify and deal with these new practices will be an important key to the more widespread use of the new technologies.

For more information or to request a presentation on the 2024/25 Future of Investing findings, please contact your Franklin Templeton representative or reach us directly at [email protected]



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