Why BlackRock and the DTCC Are Betting Billions on Tokenized Government Debt Right Now

Table of Contents

TL;DR

  • Tokenized US Treasuries surpassed $10.8 billion despite a broad crypto market downturn.
  • The DTCC processed $3.7 quadrillion in 2024 and now builds tokenization infrastructure.
  • BlackRock’s BUIDL fund alone holds over $1.2 billion in tokenized Treasury assets.

Three years ago, converting sovereign debt into digital tokens read like a proof-of-concept with no clear path to institutional relevance. Today, the market built on that idea holds more than $10.8 billion in capitalization and keeps climbing through a macroeconomic environment that offers very few reasons for optimism.

Since January 1, 2026, the tokenized US Treasury market added over $1 billion in value, rising from $8.9 billion at the start of the year. To place the full arc in context: the same market opened 2025 below $4 billion in total capitalization.

According to Token Terminal data, cumulative growth since 2024 amounts to a 50x expansion — a trajectory that few corners of the financial industry can match over the same period.

No single event explains that climb entirely, but one entry point stands out in the timeline. BlackRock’s March 2024 launch of its USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, known as BUIDL, brought a level of institutional credibility that the market had not yet attracted. BUIDL now carries a market cap above $1.2 billion on its own, and its presence pulled in other asset managers who had previously kept their distance.

US Government, United States, Bonds, RWA, RWA Tokenization

The appeal of a tokenized Treasury bond doesn’t rest on the technology alone — it rests on the combination of two properties that rarely coexist in the same instrument. US government debt carries the deepest liquidity in global finance and serves as the standard reference asset for large institutional portfolios.

US Government, United States, Bonds, RWA, RWA Tokenization

Corporations and fund managers already use short-term Treasuries, those with maturities of one year or less, as a direct substitute for physical cash. Putting those instruments onchain adds operational efficiency without altering what the underlying asset actually is. For institutions already holding Treasuries, the migration to a tokenized format requires adjusting infrastructure, not investment philosophy.

The Institution That Settles $3.7 Quadrillion a Year Now Builds Tokenization Rails

The most consequential development in the recent history of the tokenized real-world asset market didn’t come from a crypto-native firm. In December 2025, the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation — the DTCC — announced its entry into asset tokenization, starting with US Treasuries on the Canton network.

The DTCC sits at the center of global financial infrastructure. It processed $3.7 quadrillion in transaction volume during 2024, making it the largest clearinghouse in the world by a wide margin. When an organization carrying that weight builds tokenization infrastructure, the signal to the broader financial industry carries a different register than anything a blockchain startup could produce.

CEO Frank La Salla confirmed the scope of the ambition

Exchange-traded funds and equities follow Treasuries in the development roadmap, with the organization targeting what it describes as a “broad spectrum” of financial assets over time.

The Canton network serves as the technical foundation, but the institutional logic driving the decision has nothing to do with crypto trends — it has everything to do with settlement efficiency at a scale where even marginal improvements translate into enormous operational savings.

The market’s continued expansion through a broad crypto downturn that started in October 2025 clarifies something important about who actually buys tokenized Treasuries and why. Institutional investors don’t purchase these instruments as a speculative position on a token’s price.

BlackRock is in talks with the SEC to tokenize its flagship iShares ETFs, with an estimated timeline between 90 days and 12 months.

They buy them because the tokenized format solves a real operational problem inside portfolios that already held the same assets in traditional form. The asset doesn’t change. The plumbing around it does.

Every new Treasury token minted generates on-chain activity, transaction fees, and demand for network infrastructure.Ā 

As the volume of real-world assets on public and permissioned chains expands, the protocols supporting them build a revenue base that doesn’t depend on speculative cycles or the price volatility that defines native crypto assets. That separation between infrastructure revenue and market sentiment is exactly what institutional capital looks for before committing at scale.

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