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This opinion editorial talks about how the tokenization of everything in the Crypto world will create a more liquid world. New markets would radically change the dynamics of global trade, for the better.

Liquidity refers to the ability of an asset to be converted into cash easily

However, with the advent of blockchain, ownership will continue to move from analogue to digital and (I predict) we will witness the release of trillions of illiquid assets into liquid marketplaces.

There are $256 trillion of real-world assets. Most of these assets are still signified by paper and are highly illiquid.

Yesterday I saw this advertisement on the Tube offering me the chance to buy fractionalized ownership in an artist and it got me thinking…

(Securitization has existed for 100s of years and was the fuel for the 2008 financial crisis when bankers securitized and sold trillions of dollars of collateralized mortgage loans that were completed divorced from the loans’ underlying risk profiles).

The tokenization of an asset also bears similarities to the process of securitization, where financiers slice, dice and sell fractional ownership of an asset.

On-chain tokens that denote real-world assets are often labelled security tokens. In many ways, these tokens resemble traditional securities (like stocks) that are digitally represented and traded in the markets today.

This begs the question whether security tokens are really that different to securities or are merely securities skirting regulation?

My belief is that because of the structural design of the blockchain, which reduces transaction costs through an immutable record of ownership, security tokens will prove a significant innovation that transforms global trade. (Read also: Crypto ICO vs. Stock IPO: What’s the Difference?)

By removing middlemen and embedding both execution and legality within smart contract code, tokens will augment the ease of divisibility and lower the cost global transfers of ownership.

As a result, our ability to trade real-world assets that are currently illiquid should increase by an order of magnitude. The ICO wave, which was a truly global affair, maybe a taste of what’s to come.

In the not too distant future, we may live in a world where people from all corners of the globe trade everything from fractional ownership in Cristiano Ronaldo’s future earnings to a Manhattan office building. Any asset will be able to be placed on the spectrum of liquidity and made tradable.

The second order effects that will arise from this increased liquidity could be legion. I predict the liquidity discount for historically illiquid assets will deepen and fund managers of illiquid assets will be forced to innovate.

New markets will emerge for under-utilized and illiquid assets that were previously inaccessible, such as diamond mines and carbon offsets. Cross-border trade will increase.

Technology funding will become further decentralized and the IPO gatekeepers may be removed as the ICO model proves itself as an alternative. And the traders may inherit the earth, something I am very ambivalent about.

See also: Beginner’s Guide to ICO Investing: How to Participate in ICOs)

An initial coin offering (ICO) is a means of crowdfunding, through the creation and sale of a digital coin or token to fund project development.

Creating a legal bridge between blockchains and real-world assets will prove the biggest hurdle because it requires novel legal entities designed around cross-jurisdictional property and tax law.

It’s also not entirely clear how governments will react to all of this given that many regulations are in place to protect non-accredited investors.

However, if these hurdles are surmounted the world’s assets may quickly liquidate. If you’re building anything to facilitate this disruption, please get in touch.