Tokenized but Illiquid? Evidence from Real-World Asset Markets
For practitioners and researchers in decentralized finance, this paper provides an empirical framework to distinguish tokenization from liquidity, showing that tokenization alone does not guarantee liquidity.
This paper investigates whether tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) exhibit meaningful on-chain liquidity, finding substantial heterogeneity across asset categories: gold-backed tokens show broader holder bases and more persistent activity than Treasury or private-credit tokens, while asset value alone does not predict liquidity.
Real-world asset tokenization is often presented as a mechanism for improving the liquidity of traditionally illiquid assets. However, on-chain representation and secondary-market liquidity are distinct outcomes. This paper examines whether tokenized real-world assets exhibit meaningful observed liquidity and identifies the token characteristics associated with higher market activity. Using token-level data from RWA.xyz and supplemental contract-level observations from Etherscan, the study constructs an Ethereum-based monthly panel of non-stablecoin real-world assets across three prominent categories: U.S. Treasury-backed tokens, gold-backed commodity tokens, and private-credit-related tokens. Liquidity is measured using turnover, active addresses, and an active-month indicator. The empirical design combines descriptive statistics, non-parametric group tests, and exploratory panel regressions suited to short and sparse token histories. The results show substantial heterogeneity across asset categories. Gold-backed tokens exhibit broader holder bases and more persistent on-chain activity than many Treasury and private-credit-related products, while outstanding asset value alone does not reliably predict observed liquidity. The paper contributes to the literature by developing a clearer empirical measurement framework for real-world-asset liquidity and showing that tokenization and liquidity should be analyzed as distinct outcomes.