Why Crypto Tokenization Fails—and the One Mistake Institutions Keep Making
Key Takeaways
Traditional finance relies on manual checks, but Zignaly has scaled to over 500,000 users to disrupt this.Abdul Rafay Gadit explains how Zigchain integrates compliance rules natively into assets to streamline settlement.Rather than using speculative tokens, next-gen Layer 1s aim to align supply with 100% measurable utility.
Bridging Traditional Finance and Decentralized Infrastructure
For decades, the back offices of global wealth management have run on a quiet, expensive, and deeply fragmented engine. Traditional institutional funds remain anchored to complex legacy settlement layers—systems where clearing an asset or verifying a single investor can take days, requiring a mountain of paperwork.
As the financial world moves toward the tokenization of real-world assets ( RWAs) and private credit, the industry faces a fundamental hurdle: how to scale while staying compliant, secure and hyper-efficient.
To understand the solution, we spoke with Abdul Rafay Gadit, co-founder of Zignaly and the Layer 1 network Zigchain. With a background in transaction banking at Standard Chartered and tech exits like Cloudways ($350 million), Gadit bridges traditional finance and decentralized infrastructure. His perspective: The breakthrough of blockchain is not speed, but a structural shift in how trust and compliance are engineered.
In traditional banking frameworks, compliance is treated as a lagging, reactive process. When an asset changes hands, a chain reaction of manual checks is triggered.
“Legacy compliance is expensive because nobody trusts the last check, so everyone repeats it,” Gadit says. “And what you have then is one intermediary after another verifying the same thing the one before them already verified. It’s just so inefficient.”
Because participants operate in data silos, each party must manually reconstruct the state of compliance. The result is a slow, error-prone game of institutional telephone.
Where traditional infrastructure relies on external checks, purpose-built Layer 1 blockchains integrate compliance directly into the asset itself. In this architecture, eligibility requirements, geographic restrictions and transfer laws do not live in separate corporate databases—they travel with the token.
“On-chain, the eligibility and transfer rules travel with the asset. And because the asset already knows who can hold it and how it’s allowed to move, nothing needs reconstructing every time it’s handed over,” Gadit explains.
This integration merges execution, ownership, settlement, and reconciliation into a single, verifiable state.
“Compliance stops trailing behind the transaction as paperwork and becomes part of the infrastructure the transaction runs on. The real gain isn’t speed … It’s that issuers, distributors, custodians, and investors are finally looking at the same source of truth instead of reconstructing five slightly different versions of it.”
Institutional allocators remain skeptical of speculative utility tokens. Bridging this divide requires throwing out hype-driven models in favor of measurable, utility-driven metrics.
“Institutions are not really responsive to governance language; they respond to something measurable,” Gadit notes. “A token has to have utility. It has to connect to real usage, real fee flow, and if it can’t be tied to any of that, then really, it doesn’t matter much.”
Instead of using emissions to temporarily rent liquidity, sustainable models tie token demand directly to transaction activity, network fees and programmatic buybacks.
“If you can get allocators to read supply, issuance, fee capture, and buybacks in the same way they’d read dilution or capital allocation at a listed company, then that’s going to go a long way. Pass that test, and you’re in the conversation,” Gadit adds.
The RWA Misconception: The Token Is the Last Step
Meanwhile, as institutional capital looks toward RWA tokenization, a major misconception persists. Many market participants assume that the primary hurdle of tokenization is a technical one—simply minting the token itself. According to Gadit, this view fundamentally misses the point of what makes an asset investable.
“Everything that actually matters sits underneath it: legal ownership, structures that hold up if something fails, who’s eligible to hold the asset, custody, servicing, valuation, and whether redemption actually works when someone asks for it. A token can’t rescue a weak asset or a weak structure; it just moves a weak thing faster.”
Solving this friction requires designing networks where the underlying legal and regulatory frameworks are deeply woven into the ledger’s DNA. This, according to Gadit, is where Zigchain is positioning itself—by aligning blockchain’s speed with institutional-grade regulatory standards.
Instead of asking traditional players to bypass legacy standards, next-generation financial networks must build compliance directly into the plumbing.
While Zignaly built its success on an application layer—scaling to 500,000 users and more than $10 billion in volume—the move to a dedicated Cosmos SDK Layer 1 was a natural architectural evolution to support institutional scaling.
“As we worked with larger institutions, it became clear that the bottleneck wasn’t the application, it was the infrastructure underneath it,” Gadit explains. “However well-built an application is, it still relies on someone else’s rules for settlement, asset issuance, custody, and finality. You can keep improving the user experience, but you’re still going to find yourself constrained by decisions made lower down the stack.”
Developing a custom Layer 1 allows compliance, asset issuance, liquidity, and distribution to be coded natively into the base protocol.
Yet, building this level of institutional infrastructure requires more than just smart contracts; it requires an active, forward-thinking regulatory environment. Operating out of the United Arab Emirates has given Gadit a front-row seat to one of the world’s fastest-growing digital asset hubs.
Rather than looking at regulators as a hurdle, Gadit views the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) integrated ecosystem as a key collaborator.
“The DIFC and the wider UAE framework bring regulators, fund structures, custodians, and blockchain networks into the same ecosystem,” Gadit says, “making it much easier to build institutional products collaboratively instead of in parallel.”
By aligning on-chain compliance, equity-like tokenomics and supportive regulatory environments, the divide between legacy finance and blockchain continues to close.
