The friction began when a16z published an essay arguing that TradFi firms prioritize programmable financial infrastructure over open, permissionless models. According to a16z, the industry will likely adopt blockchain features—such as atomic settlement and tokenization—only if they can retain strict control over governance and compliance. They posit that institutional projects and open DeFi networks will coexist, with banks cherry-picking technology from the latter while operating within private silos.
Lorenzo Valente, director of research at ARK Invest, dismissed the a16z thesis as overly bearish. He pointed to the existing momentum on public chains, where tokenized real-world assets reached $29 billion by April 2026. Valente suggests that the infrastructure built by crypto-native firms is already too deeply entrenched to ignore, noting that over 40 major financial institutions are already leveraging public blockchain rails for their products.
Evidence for this shift appears in recent institutional activity, where the line between traditional finance and DeFi is thinning. Standard Chartered has forecasted that $4 trillion in assets could migrate on-chain by 2028, with established protocols like Aave, Compound, and Morpho emerging as key beneficiaries. While permissioned networks like the Canton Network offer a centralized alternative, the industry remains split. Financial firms are currently testing both controlled systems and public infrastructure, leaving the final architecture of global finance in a state of flux.

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