First, it was gold and oil. Now Bouncebit focuses on shares, ETFs and bonds, all onchain, all deficiency. If it is successful, this can be the blueprint for a fully tokenized worldwide financial system.
In an X-post on July 1, Bouncebit announced that it will launch tokenized stock products in Q4, with regard to shares, listed funds and bonds of large markets, including the US, Europe, Hong Kong and Japan.
Unlike attempts from the past that only offered synthetic exposure, these assets will be fully integrated into Defi from the first day, so that users can use them as collateral, trade on DEXs and even use for extra returns, the company said.
The movement builds on the existing Token -Lawstoles of Bouncebit, such as gold and crude oil, but marks its most ambitious push but still in traditional finances.
Bouncebit’s calculated expansion to Tokenized shares
The Bouncebit hinge from the tokenizing of gold and oil to shares represents the earlier success of the company with raw materials, which marks a strategic escalation supported by tangible proof of concept.
In May, the platform carried out a double yield strategy using BlackRock’s Buidl, a tokenized treasury product, as collateral. By using Buidl in BTC -Basishandel, while at the same time recorded his native dollar yield, Bouncebit generated a combined APY of 24%. This is a stark contrast with inactive stablecoin -superior.
Now, applying that model to public effects, a market -throwing products in size and liquidity, offers both a monumental opportunity and a litmus test for the broader tokenisation thesis.
In contrast to raw materials or treasury, shares are entangled with shareholder rights, business actions and fragmented global regulations. The Bouncebit gamble depends on his tokenized Stocoming, a framework that is designed to enclose this assets from the first day in Defi.
If it is carried out well, this can unlock unprecedented capital efficiency for traditional effects. But the challenges are formidable, especially in liquidity and compliance.
However, the timing is suitable. Tokenized shares experience a revival, with Bybit, Kraken and Robinhood launching in conforming, assets-supported offers about Solana and Arbitrum, mainly for non-American users.
Nevertheless, Bouncebit’s approach differs greatly from the Playbooks of FTX, Binance or even Mirror Protocol. Those early experiments, whether it is centralized, non-permit or fully synthetic, have ultimately collapsed under legal, technical or question-side stress. Bouncebit seems to bet that the missing ingredient always functioned. A share in stock that cannot be traded 24/7 or return, or yield can offer novelty, but no value.