Case Study:– Tokenization has spent years in a strange holding pattern. In 2025, everyone agreed it could change finance – from global watchdogs such as the SEC and FCA to Tradfi giants like Blackrock and JPMorgan,
But most real-world attempts stopped at pilots, demos, or neatly packaged announcements that never went much further. Assets were tokenized, sure but rarely in a way that altered how private markets actually functioned.
That gap is what this CoinGape Research case study set out to examine.
Instead of asking whether tokenization is possible, the research looks at what happens when a platform actually builds the reliable institutional-grade infrastructure for it. The case follows how one Asset Tokenization Platform moved from limited, early deployments to handling real capital, real issuers, and real compliance constraints. Since then even though quietly, it has been onboarding institutional users and bridging tradfi with defi.
Securitize: The Tokenization Case Study
While many have long pointed out how traditional markets suffer from low liquidity, exclusivity, and limited accessibility, tokenisation platforms such as Securitize are actually addressing these inefficiencies through its Compliant Tokenization Infrastructure. As regulatory clarity improves, these platforms are no longer experimental but are becoming deeply embedded within regulated market structures.
One such example highlighted in this case study is Securitize, a Carlos Domingo-led security tokenisation platform. It has emerged as a regulated exchange and issuance infrastructure for digital securities.
This tokenization case study uses Securitize’s AUM growth to see how the platform has witnessed increasing institutional participation rather than speculative retail demand.
While tokenisation of equities often dominates headlines, Securitize’s growth trajectory tells a different story. The majority of securitized leads on the platform are coming from low-risk, institutional assets, with US Treasury-backed products forming the core demand at 59%. Tokenized Private Equity Fund is still a niche category as Securitize is just a mere entrant into it.
Securitize’s Tokenization-led Revenue Model
Interestingly, backed by its institutional-grade infrastructure, Securitize has continued to generate revenues at scale. The case study highlights how the platform has built a recurring revenue model, with revenues projected to reach as much as $110 million.
In its latest filings, the company reported revenues of $55.6 million for the first nine months of 2025. That underlines the commercial viability of regulated tokenisation platforms operating within compliant frameworks.
Rather than disclosing every revenue driver, the study focuses on the structural factors that have made sustained revenue generation possible.
Toeing in Line with Regulators
As tokenisation continues to accelerate, one thing that often stresses out tokenisation platforms is regulation. They remain central to their execution and operational strategies.
Another assumption this case challenges is the idea that regulation slows tokenization down. In practice, regulation appears to be what makes it viable.
Institutions need legal certainty. They need clarity on who can hold an asset, how transfers are approved, and how records are maintained. The research shows that platforms aligning closely with existing securities frameworks are the ones moving beyond pilots.
The case study reveals how Securitize has emerged as a regulation-first tokenisation platform. It is operating as a FINRA-compliant in the United States to MiFID registered tokenization platform in the EU.
Securitize case study details its further authorisations and certifications across jurisdictions, outlinining how regulatory alignment has become a competitive advantage rather than a constraint for Securitize.
Rather than bypassing rules, Securitize is translating them into code.
What tokenization built for institutions look like
One of the clearest findings from this RWA Tokenization Case Study is that institutional adoption only happens when tokenization behaves less like crypto and more like capital-markets infrastructure.
That means compliance isn’t optional or bolted on later. Investor eligibility, transfer restrictions, reporting, and record-keeping are embedded into the system from the start. Ownership updates are automatic. Settlement is faster not because it’s flashy, but because there are fewer moving parts.
Why this matters now
Private markets aren’t getting smaller. Neither is the pressure to modernise how they operate. As public markets move faster and systems become more automated, the contrast is becoming harder to justify.
This case study doesn’t argue or debate Tokenization vs TradFi. It suggests something more modest and more realistic. That tokenization, done properly with Compliant Tokenization Infrastructure, can quietly upgrade the machinery with consistent revenues.
And those shifts, once they’re embedded, tend to stick.
Read the full CoinGape Research case study to explore the data, structure, and how this shift can be executed.
Investment disclaimer: The content reflects the author’s personal views and current market conditions. Please conduct your own research before investing in cryptocurrencies, as neither the author nor the publication is responsible for any financial losses.
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