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The "invincible body" of EU banks in the tokenization track
While global financial regulators generally maintain a "hit first, give candy later" attitude towards tokenized assets, the EU suddenly offers an extraordinary gift: the new regulation states that banks do not have to bear an additional 1250% capital penalty when dealing with tokenized assets, treating them on par with traditional assets.
What is this concept? In the past, when banks dealt with tokenization, it was like going into the water wearing lead pants; even a small movement would incur huge capital costs. And now? It's like changing into swim trunks to dive in, and they even have lifeguards.
Why is it important? Tokenized assets refer to packaging real-world securities, bonds, real estate, and even artworks into digital tokens on the blockchain. Its advantages include fractional trading (everyone can have a share), 24/7 settlement (no need to wait for exchanges to open), and full-chain transparency (it's hard to hide anything).
The EU's new regulations have lowered the threshold for banks to enter the tokenization track from "climbing Mount Everest" to "slipping next door to the park." Lower capital occupation means that products can be launched more quickly and expanded more easily, and may even give rise to new businesses such as on-chain bonds and real estate tokenization REITs.
Of course, the EBA is also very clear - customer protection, anti-money laundering, and technological risk control remain hard indicators. The regulatory logic is: you are allowed to drive fast, but seat belts, brakes, and speed limits must be in place.
My perspective: This is not only a deregulation of financial innovation but also a strategic layout for geopolitical financial competition. European Union banks may take several years to firmly grasp the pricing power of the tokenized market, leaving banks in other regions to only "chase after the dust."
Postscript: While others are still paying the "entry deposit" for tokenization, you are already sprinting ahead. The EU banks, this wave is truly a "marathon run with a golden whistle."