Over the past several years, tokenization has transformed from a niche technological experiment into a major development in global finance.
While much of the conversation has centered on retail investors, fractional ownership and new markets for hard assets like gold, I believe the next—and arguably far more consequential—chapter is unfolding inside corporate finance departments.
I see the corporate treasury, traditionally one of the most conservative functions inside any company, as on the brink of a structural shift. As tokenized commodities and real assets become widely available through regulated digital rails, treasurers seem poised to begin holding these assets directly—just as they hold cash, currency hedges and short-term securities today.
The infrastructure for this is already being built, making the incentives for corporations to adopt tokenized assets clear.
The Treasury Problem Nobody Wants To Discuss
Corporate treasuries face a problem that has quietly been growing for years: The global economy is becoming more volatile while traditional hedging tools have not evolved to match the speed of modern commerce.













