How Poor Countries Could Lead the Way in Tokenizing Real Stuff

Sun Dec 28 2025
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In 2026, countries that are still growing might take the lead in turning real things into digital tokens. This is what Jesse Knutson, a big shot at a crypto exchange, thinks. He believes these countries have a big chance because they often struggle with getting money and investments. Turning real things into digital tokens can help. It lets people invest in things they couldn't before. For example, a person might not have enough money to buy a whole building, but they could buy a tiny part of it. This is called fractionalization. It makes investing easier for everyone. In rich countries, people are tokenizing things like government bonds and money market funds. But in poorer countries, they're focusing on real estate and commodities. This makes sense because these are things that people in these countries understand and value.
But there are still problems to solve. One big issue is making sure that the digital contracts are legal and can be enforced. Another is making sure there's enough money moving around so that people can buy and sell these tokens without losing value. Also, there need to be rules to protect investors. Another challenge is getting all these tokens to work together. Right now, different blockchains have different rules. This makes it hard for tokens to move around and be used in different places. To make this work, everyone needs to agree on some basic rules. If these problems can be solved, the market for tokenized real-world assets could grow to trillions of dollars. But for that to happen, big companies need to move from testing to actually selling these products.
https://localnews.ai/article/how-poor-countries-could-lead-the-way-in-tokenizing-real-stuff-f61ca12e

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