Keith Grossman cites BlackRock's tokenized funds as evidence of accelerating adoption
MoonPay president Keith Grossman believes tokenization can disrupt the financial industry faster than digitization disrupted media. He points to major institutions like BlackRock already offering tokenized funds as evidence that transformation is underway.
The comparison to media digitization suggests profound changes ahead for how financial assets are created, distributed, and traded.
Digitization fundamentally reshaped media over two decades. Newspapers, music labels, and television networks saw their business models upended as content moved online. Companies that failed to adapt disappeared while new digital-native players emerged.
Grossman argues finance faces a similar reckoning but on an accelerated timeline. The infrastructure for tokenization already exists, regulatory frameworks are developing, and institutional players are actively participating rather than resisting.
BlackRock's entry into tokenized funds carries significant weight. The world's largest asset manager launching tokenized products signals mainstream acceptance that previous crypto cycles lacked.
BlackRock's BUIDL fund, which tokenizes U.S. Treasury exposure, has attracted substantial capital since launch. Other major institutions including Franklin Templeton and JPMorgan have pursued similar initiatives.
This institutional participation differs markedly from media companies' initial resistance to digitization, potentially accelerating finance's transformation.
Tokenization converts real-world assets into blockchain-based digital tokens, enabling fractional ownership, instant settlement, and global accessibility. Benefits include reduced intermediary costs, increased liquidity for traditionally illiquid assets, and round-the-clock trading.
Applications extend beyond funds to real estate, private equity, bonds, and commodities. The total addressable market encompasses virtually all financial assets.
If Grossman's prediction proves accurate, traditional financial intermediaries face significant disruption. Firms that embrace tokenization may thrive while those clinging to legacy systems risk obsolescence.
For investors and consumers, tokenization promises broader access to previously exclusive asset classes and more efficient markets.

