Quick Breakdown
- Institutional investors project tokenized assets could make up 10–25% of portfolios by 2030.
- Private equity and fixed income are seen as early leaders in blockchain adoption.
- State Street report highlights convergence of tokenization, AI, and quantum tech in finance.
Institutional investors are betting big on blockchain as the next frontier of finance, with tokenized assets projected to account for up to a quarter of global portfolios by the end of the decade, according to a new State Street report.
The study, published Thursday, estimates that between 10% and 24% of institutional investments could be made through tokenized instruments by 2030, signaling a shift from experimentation to large-scale adoption in traditional finance.
Our 2025 global research on #digitalassets and emerging technologies reveals a decisive shift in adoption and strategic commitment among institutional investors toward #tokenization and blockchain-enabled transformation. Read more: https://t.co/hzk1f3dZ1O pic.twitter.com/tULwI2Ke88
— State Street (@StateStreet) October 9, 2025
Private markets lead the tokenization wave
Private equity and private fixed income are emerging as early use cases for tokenization due to persistent issues of illiquidity and high operational costs. By turning assets into blockchain-based tokens, institutions can enable fractional ownership, faster settlement, and greater market accessibility.
“Institutional investors are moving beyond experimentation, and digital assets are now a strategic lever for growth, efficiency, and innovation,” said Joerg Ambrosius, President of Investment Services at State Street.
Ambrosius added that tokenization, artificial intelligence, and quantum computing are converging to reshape financial infrastructure, with early adopters positioning for long-term competitive advantage.
Digital assets exposure expected to double
State Street’s research shows that institutional portfolios currently hold about 7% in digital assets, with allocations expected to rise to 16% within three years. These holdings primarily consist of digital cash and tokenized versions of listed equities and fixed income instruments.
Asset managers are reportedly outpacing asset owners in their exposure to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and tokenized assets, reflecting a stronger risk appetite and faster integration into their investment frameworks.
Bitcoin remains the top performer, with 27% of respondents citing it as their best-returning asset today and a quarter expecting it to remain dominant over the next three years. Ethereum followed closely, reinforcing its role as a key pillar of institutional crypto strategy.
Meanwhile, Magda Wierzycka, CEO of South African investment firm Sygnia, urged investors to avoid excessive exposure to the company’s Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF), warning that the cryptocurrency’s price volatility remains a major risk despite growing institutional adoption.
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