Tokenized Finance

Tokenization is a structural shift in financial architecture. This paper examines how programmable ledgers transform settlement, liquidity, and risk, and argues that success hinges on anchoring digital finance in public trust and policy frameworks.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2026 Issue 001
Publication date: April 2026
ISBN: 9798229042468
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Topics covered in this book

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Finance , Money and Monetary Policy , Business and Financial , Tokenization , Financial Market Infrastructure , Settlement Finality , Interoperability , Programmable Finance , Financial Stability , Smart Contracts , Financial sector stability , Liquidity , Infrastructure , Smart contracts , Europe

Summary

Tokenization—the representation of financial assets and liabilities on programmable digital ledgers—is increasingly shaping financial system developments. The most consequential transformation is occurring within the regulated financial system, including banks, asset managers, and financial market infrastructures, where tokenization can enable atomic settlement, continuous liquidity management, and embedded compliance. This paper argues that tokenization constitutes a structural shift in financial architecture rather than a marginal efficiency improvement. It describes how permissioned shared ledgers, programmable financial assets, and smart contract-based risk management alter the nature of settlement, liquidity, and systemic risk. The paper emphasizes that the long-term success of tokenization depends on anchoring digital finance in public trust through clear policy frameworks and safe settlement assets, robust governance of code, legal certainty, and international coordination. Absent such anchors, tokenization risks amplifying financial instability through speed, concentration, and fragmentation, as contract-based risk management alter the nature of settlement, liquidity, and systemic risk.