Invezz
2026-06-04 12:29:27

Beyond the whitepaper: the untapped power of institutional customer intelligence

There is a kind of institutional knowledge that accumulates inside a financial firm over decades of customer relationships, one that doesn't transfer neatly into a pitch deck or a whitepaper but lives in risk-tolerance profiles built across thousands of individual investment decisions and in behavioral data revealing how a customer responds to a market downturn. And while this knowledge doesn't lend itself to press releases, it, in many cases, turns out to be the most consequential thing a traditional financial institution brings to a Web3 venture (even more valuable than its capital and more durable than its brand alone). The question of whether TradFi giants can convert their massive customer bases into onchain participants is becoming less hypothetical, as initiatives like Strium, developed through SBI Holdings and Startale Group’s strategic joint venture, are beginning to test that thesis at scale. The platform is being positioned as exchange-layer infrastructure for 24/7 trading of tokenized securities and real-world assets, with the potential to bring blockchain-based markets to users already within SBI’s established financial ecosystem. What TradFi institutions actually know The RWA tokenization market grew from roughly $6 billion to $33.4 billion between early 2025 and May 2026, a trajectory driven almost entirely by institutional demand rather than retail. The assets attracting institutional capital are, notably, familiar ones, i.e., tokenized versions of instruments like private credit, treasury debt, and commodities, that investors have held for decades in conventional form. Tokenized RWA TVL per sector (source: RWA.xyz) The behavioral implication of this isn't subtle because when 86% of institutional investors surveyed last year reported existing exposure to (or firm intent to allocate toward) digital assets, the products drawing that interest were overwhelmingly those that mapped to existing mental models. DeFi protocols, for all their technical sophistication, haven't been able to have meaningful access to these opportunities because the infrastructure they've built has primarily been designed by and for participants already comfortable with blockchain systems, calibrated for users willing to tolerate significant onboarding friction in exchange for access to novel yield mechanisms. Designing for the customer who doesn't know what an L2 is Building a product for an investor who has held a securities account for fifteen years, understands dividend reinvestment, and has never created a crypto wallet is a fundamentally different task from building for an early adopter who arrived through a DeFi protocol in 2020. The latter can navigate gas fees, self-custody their keys, and move between platforms with relative ease, but the former still requires an experience where none of that is visible or relevant. This is where architectural decisions inside platforms like Strium become significant. Account abstraction, which reduces the wallet-management burden at the user-facing layer, is likely to be a key requirement for any Web3 product aimed at mainstream financial customers. Strium’s planned architecture combines this with institutional custody and real-time compliance monitoring, suggesting that SBI Holdings and Startale are trying to bring onchain markets closer to the expectations of regulated financial infrastructure rather than asking users to adapt to a purely crypto-native model. In this structure, Startale Group contributes the blockchain architecture and product expertise, while SBI brings regulated financial-market credibility, securities and banking experience, and a large distribution base. That combination is the strategic point: Strium is not just a technical experiment, but an attempt to make tokenized securities infrastructure legible to institutions, regulators, and mainstream financial users. The stablecoin layer builds on this logic through JPYSC, a Japanese-yen-denominated stablecoin designed as a trust-based stablecoin issued by Shinsei Trust & Banking Co., Ltd. under Japan’s regulatory framework. Its strategic purpose is clear: to give Japanese institutions and investors a yen-native settlement asset for blockchain-based financial activity, rather than forcing participation through USD stablecoins or foreign-currency rails. For a customer interacting with infrastructure such as Strium, the broader aim is that settlement, blockchain execution, compliance controls, and custody are abstracted into the platform layer. That is precisely the point of the SBI–Startale model: the end user should not have to manage the mechanics of blockchain settlement directly in order to participate in tokenized financial markets. The bigger question With the RWA tokenization market projected to reach $9.43 trillion by 2030 , its trajectory is likely going to be driven by crypto-native adoption alone, and the retail participants who could plausibly fill that space are already customers of institutions now building the onchain infrastructure to serve them. Whether those institutions can translate decades of customer intelligence into product design that converts loyalty into onchain engagement is the most interesting question in financial infrastructure right now. The post Beyond the whitepaper: the untapped power of institutional customer intelligence appeared first on Invezz

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