Tokenized Treasuries Hit $12.78B as Collateral Use Cases Take Center Stage
Rongchai Wang Apr 02, 2026 14:06
Tokenized U.S. Treasuries surpass $12.78 billion onchain. The focus now shifts from issuance to productive collateral use in institutional trading workflows.
Tokenized U.S. Treasuries have hit $12.78 billion in onchain value according to RWA.xyz, cementing their position as the dominant category in real-world asset tokenization. But the milestone itself matters less than what comes after: whether these yield-bearing digital assets can function as productive collateral rather than just sitting idle in wallets.
The shift is already underway. Standard Chartered and OKX recently launched a collateral mirroring program with Franklin Templeton that lets institutional clients use tokenized money market funds as off-exchange collateral for trading. That's the real signal here—major players moving beyond proof-of-concept toward live capital markets integration.
The Infrastructure Race Begins
Franklin Templeton's OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund invests at least 99.5% of its assets in government securities and cash-backed repos. BlackRock's BUIDL and Ondo's USDY have similarly defined the institutional profile for this category. These aren't experimental products anymore.
The timing aligns with broader institutional moves. S&P Dow Jones Indices tokenized its iBoxx U.S. Treasuries Index on the Canton Network just this week, partnering with Kaiko to make a major fixed-income benchmark available as a digital asset. When index providers start tokenizing their benchmarks, that's infrastructure being built for the long haul.
Total tokenized RWAs now exceed $27.7 billion, with Treasuries comprising roughly 46% of that figure. The concentration makes sense—these instruments combine recognizable underlying assets, yield linked to short-duration government paper, and compatibility with digital asset workflows.
What Productive Collateral Actually Means
BounceBit has positioned itself at this intersection, integrating Ondo's USDY, Franklin Templeton's Benji platform, and BlackRock's BUIDL through Securitize. Their Prime platform connects regulated custody with onchain execution, with Standard Chartered handling client asset custody.
The practical value proposition breaks down to three components: yield above risk-free rates through structured strategies, active collateral deployment rather than passive holding, and integrated custody-to-trading workflows. Whether BounceBit specifically captures this market matters less than the fact that someone will.
Circle's acquisition of Hashnote and subsequent positioning of USYC as yield-bearing collateral points to the same thesis. The stablecoin giants see tokenized Treasuries as the next layer of onchain dollar infrastructure.
Where This Goes From Here
The competition has shifted. First-mover advantage in tokenization mattered when the category was being established. Now the question is execution: who can make these assets actually useful within systems that both TradFi institutions and crypto-native capital can access?
For traders, the implications are straightforward. Capital efficiency improves when collateral earns yield while backing positions. Settlement times compress when assets move on rails that operate around the clock. The $12.78 billion figure will keep climbing, but the more telling metric will be how much of that capital gets deployed productively versus how much just sits there collecting dust.
Tokenized Treasuries have proven the concept. The utility phase determines who wins.
Image source: Shutterstock- tokenized treasuries
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