Brian Armstrong of Coinbase just made a bold claim – By 2030, crypto will make up a tenth of the world’s economy. That’s a $25 trillion figure. He’s not just pulling it out of thin air. He believes that putting real-world things on the blockchain, along with big banks finally getting serious, mirrors the internet’s early, explosive growth.
Armstrong’s catchphrase, “Onchain is the new online,” suggests we’re in the dial-up days of a new economic platform. Like the dot-com bubble, he expects a bumpy ride that will shake out the nonsense and leave behind companies with real-world use.
The idea hinges on turning everything into a token. Imagine fractional ownership of skyscrapers, private art collections, or company equity – All tradable in an instant on a blockchain. This could crack open markets that have been locked up and illiquid for centuries.
Forecasts, predictions, and a lot of ‘growing pains’…
Financial giants aren’t waiting to see what happens. BlackRock, the biggest asset manager on the planet, is already in the game with its Bitcoin trust and a new tokenized fund on the Ethereum network. Its CEO, Larry Fink, has called tokenization the “next generation for markets.”
Forecasts are all over the map, with Boston Consulting Group seeing a $16 trillion market while Citigroup pegs it closer to a more sober $4 trillion. Either way, the numbers are huge. The appeal is simple – It makes trading chunks of assets as easy as sending an email, cutting out middlemen and delays. In fact, JPMorgan is already building a platform for trading tokenized debt, and Goldman Sachs has shown it can settle digital bonds in less than a minute.
However, for crypto to hit that $25 trillion-mark, it needs more than just everyday traders. It needs Wall Street’s billions. That migration is starting, but it requires tools big money players can trust. We’re seeing the growth of regulated custodians that do more than just stash crypto in a digital vault; they offer services like staking and access to decentralized finance.
New prime brokerage services are also popping up to give institutions a single entry point to a messy market, reducing their risk. The recent success of Spot Bitcoin ETFs is a clear signal. They give big-money managers a familiar, regulated way to buy in, proving the market is growing up.
Source: Coinglass
Still, a mountain of doubt stands in the way of this crypto-utopia. Warren Buffett isn’t shy about his disdain, calling Bitcoin “rat poison squared.” He and economists like Paul Krugman see a house of cards, where value comes only from the hope that someone else will pay more later.
Then, there are the technology’s own growing pains. Networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum can feel sluggish and expensive, a far cry from the instant transactions Visa provides. Can a system that chokes on high traffic really run a piece of the global economy? The industry is scrambling for fixes. Ethereum’s recent overhaul slashed its energy use, and new “layer-2” systems are being built on top to speed things up and cut costs.
Regulatory headwinds
The biggest unknown might be the regulators. The world’s governments can’t agree on the rules. In the United States, SEC Chair Gary Gensler went after firms he believed were breaking securities laws, creating a climate of uncertainty. Europe is writing a formal playbook with its MiCA regulations, while China is building its own state-controlled version. Without clear, stable rules, big money stays nervous.
So, Armstrong’s $25 trillion prediction isn’t a sure thing. It’s a bet. It’s a bet that the tech will get fast enough, the regulators will find a middle ground, and the world’s biggest investors will see digital tokens not as a gamble, but as the future of finance.