2024 has witnessed the full launch of Bitcoin spot ETFs. As we enter 2025, the crypto industry is experiencing an unprecedented wave of institutional participation. Traditional financial giants like BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, and Visa are all betting on the crypto ecosystem, and even industry insiders who once publicly questioned it are now taking active steps. What exactly is behind this transformation?
Let's first look at the specific strategies of these players. A leading asset management company’s Bitcoin spot fund has surpassed $71 billion in assets, while they are also vigorously promoting the on-chain tokenization of traditional assets. Their leadership has explicitly stated that tokenization will be the next revolution in the financial system. An international financial institution has launched a tokenized money market fund on Ethereum and invested $100 million of its own funds to back it. Meanwhile, a payments giant has directly launched a USDC payment card, creating a bridge between stablecoins and 25 fiat currencies, integrating crypto payments into real-world consumption scenarios.
The timing of this intense deployment is very interesting—it coincides precisely with the surge in gold prices. This is no coincidence. The rapid rise in gold prices just proves the global capital’s hunger for "scarcity," and Bitcoin and on-chain asset pools fully meet this demand, doing so even more efficiently. Traditional cross-border asset transfers take days to complete, but after tokenization, this is shortened to minutes, with settlement costs dropping by over 30%. For institutional funds, this is already a qualitative leap.
Some may ask, gold is still rising, so has the "curtain fallen"? What I mean by "curtain fall" is not about price, but about the status within the financial system. Gold’s role as a "safe haven" for asset allocation is gradually being replaced by on-chain assets that offer higher efficiency and liquidity. This process is already irreversible.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
LiquidationWatcher
· 6h ago
Institutional entry is basically a game of chance—whoever is faster makes money.
View OriginalReply0
OneBlockAtATime
· 6h ago
$71 billion? This number is almost comparable to the GDP of some countries. Institutions are really not playing around.
View OriginalReply0
RetailTherapist
· 6h ago
710 billion USD, the big brothers really can't sit still anymore.
Before institutions buy the dip, retail investors have already suffered a blood loss.
Tokenization sounds good, but the real implementation still depends on giants like Visa.
Gold's decline? I feel it's a sign of multi-chain flying together.
Wait, JPMorgan also entered the market? Then I need to check their holdings again.
On-chain assets replacing gold sounds too idealistic.
The temptation of minute-level settlement is indeed hard to resist. But what about the risks?
This trick by BlackRock, isn't it just promoting after the dip has been bought?
Early retail investors are laughing, latecomers are still panicking.
Tokenization is indeed a trend, but the question is who can survive until that day.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-1a2ed0b9
· 6h ago
$71 billion? That number sounds outrageous, but the game that BlackRock is playing is indeed different.
BlackRock is really going all in. It seems that the old-school traditional finance folks are finally realizing that the crypto world is not a bubble.
Tokenization has been hyped for so long, and now someone is finally putting real money into it. The idea of minute-level settlement comparable to gold is brilliant.
USDC payment cards supporting 25 fiat currencies? That's what I want to see. Bitcoin payments might be just around the corner.
Is the status of gold about to collapse? I doubt it, but on-chain asset efficiency definitely outperforms. This battle is destined to happen.
Humans always realize what's happening too late. By the time big institutions enter, it's already too late for us.
By the way, can this wave of institutional influx really continue, or is it just another prelude to another round of harvesting retail investors?
View OriginalReply0
CommunityLurker
· 6h ago
$71 billion scale, big companies are really all in, this time is different
Traditional finance is coming in to buy the dip, tokenization was long overdue
If gold is truly replaced, asset allocation will need a reshuffle
Institutions rushing in, is this pace a bit too fast? Feels like gambling on something
Minute-level settlement, this efficiency gap is indeed worlds apart
Wait, even Visa is starting to play with stablecoins? That's terrifying upon closer thought
Tokenization revolution... sounds a bit mysterious, but data doesn't lie
A few months ago, everyone was bearish, now they’re flipping and buying? Capital is like this
Gold rising is a safe haven, Bitcoin rising is also a safe haven, they’re just different paths to the same goal
When the institutional tide comes, retail stories can’t be told anymore
View OriginalReply0
MetaEggplant
· 6h ago
A $71 billion BTC fund—this number is indeed formidable, but what’s even more astonishing is that traditional finance is starting to believe in on-chain tokenization. It’s truly magical.
2024 has witnessed the full launch of Bitcoin spot ETFs. As we enter 2025, the crypto industry is experiencing an unprecedented wave of institutional participation. Traditional financial giants like BlackRock, JPMorgan Chase, and Visa are all betting on the crypto ecosystem, and even industry insiders who once publicly questioned it are now taking active steps. What exactly is behind this transformation?
Let's first look at the specific strategies of these players. A leading asset management company’s Bitcoin spot fund has surpassed $71 billion in assets, while they are also vigorously promoting the on-chain tokenization of traditional assets. Their leadership has explicitly stated that tokenization will be the next revolution in the financial system. An international financial institution has launched a tokenized money market fund on Ethereum and invested $100 million of its own funds to back it. Meanwhile, a payments giant has directly launched a USDC payment card, creating a bridge between stablecoins and 25 fiat currencies, integrating crypto payments into real-world consumption scenarios.
The timing of this intense deployment is very interesting—it coincides precisely with the surge in gold prices. This is no coincidence. The rapid rise in gold prices just proves the global capital’s hunger for "scarcity," and Bitcoin and on-chain asset pools fully meet this demand, doing so even more efficiently. Traditional cross-border asset transfers take days to complete, but after tokenization, this is shortened to minutes, with settlement costs dropping by over 30%. For institutional funds, this is already a qualitative leap.
Some may ask, gold is still rising, so has the "curtain fallen"? What I mean by "curtain fall" is not about price, but about the status within the financial system. Gold’s role as a "safe haven" for asset allocation is gradually being replaced by on-chain assets that offer higher efficiency and liquidity. This process is already irreversible.