As global regulations evolve around cryptocurrencies, they present an opportunity to reach the foundational promise of crypto: becoming a trustless financial asset class.
People already consider crypto financial assets; now, the evolving regulations are treating them as such.
On one side, crypto-native companies strive to scale while adapting to new compliance requirements. On the other, traditional financial institutions are eager to integrate blockchain technology and digital assets into their existing operations. Both face unique challenges but share common ground in their need for innovation within regulatory boundaries.
Collateral-backed stable assets are not a new concept. E-money regulations in the EU and the rise of neobanks like Revolut, Wise, and PayPal are all results of collateralized virtual asset issuance— but on centralized internal ledgers. Now, these ledgers migrate to decentralized infrastructures, but the ideology remains the same: digital assets backed by real-world assets.
An essential bridge between the two worlds is mandatory. However, there are back-office challenges in properly mirroring the two realms and providing a seamless, reconcilable money flow.
Storing and managing digital assets on behalf of clients requires robust account management for audit-proof segregation of corporate and client assets. You don't want to mix up — even accidentally — the assets, as that could result in immediate regulatory crackdowns.
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