Today is March 22. Tiantian has noticed that many people have been watching the inflow and outflow of ETF funds by large institutions, but if you broaden your perspective, you will find that the real giants are frantically seizing another trillion-dollar track: RWA (Real World Assets on Chain).
The enormous capital of traditional finance wants to enter, but the biggest obstacle is not the public chain's speed but the gap in "audit compliance." How can real-world properties, government bonds, and even equity prove their legitimacy on-chain without revealing their bottom line?
This is my recent re-evaluation of @SignOfficial . If it was previously said to be a safe haven channel for geopolitical reasons, then in the financial dimension, SIGN is more like the "underlying chip" of the RWA track. It provides a set of invisible compliance APIs. When traditional institutions package assets onto the chain, they can directly call SIGN's full-chain credential network to prove the authenticity and legality of the assets to the entire network.
The most terrifying moat of this B-end infrastructure lies in the "extremely high replacement cost." Once the asset issuance systems of Wall Street giants or sovereign funds embed the underlying verification of #SIGN , forming a closed business loop, they will never easily change the protocol. This system-level protocol stickiness is far more robust than those consumer applications that rely on airdrops to keep users engaged.
As real assets from the traditional world begin to migrate to Web3, the system that holds the ultimate interpretation power of asset verification will truly be the king without a crown.
