Top 10 Platforms Building The Data Layer For Tokenized Assets In 2026

Tokenized assets are no longer just a niche crypto talking point. The market now spans tokenized Treasuries, private credit, funds, equities, real estate, and a growing set of blockchain-based market infrastructure. RWA.xyz says the tokenized real-world asset market it tracks now represents about $26.71 billion in distributed asset value, with $345.07 billion in represented asset value and nearly 700,000 holders across the ecosystem.
Once a market gets that large, it starts needing something more than issuance tools and trading venues. It needs better intelligence, cleaner data, deeper visibility, and a way to make sense of what is actually happening across issuers, chains, and asset classes. That is why a new class of startups is emerging, all trying in different ways to become the Bloomberg Terminal for tokenized assets.
RWA.xyz
RWA.xyz is probably the closest thing the market has right now to a dedicated tokenized-assets data terminal. The company says it’s a market intelligence platform rather than simply marketing dashboards, and is a purpose-built solution for understanding tokenization on all public blockchains.
It also collates and normalises first-party data, monitors over 240 issuers on 25+ blockchains, and continues to grow its classification and research matrix. If you want the broadest real-time snapshot of the tokenized asset market, this is where most people start.

Inveniam
Inveniam is taking a more institutional route. Its platform is built around private-market data, valuation, and trusted information flows, which makes it feel less like a crypto dashboard and more like a serious attempt to modernize how private assets are priced and understood.
The company says it provides sovereign-grade infrastructure for AI-driven markets. When it completed its acquisition of Swarm in February, it said it already anchored more than $200 billion of private asset data to blockchain for major asset managers, banks, and sovereign wealth funds. That is a very Bloomberg-like ambition, especially for private and illiquid assets where pricing clarity is still weak.

Securitize
Securitize is usually described as a tokenization platform, but it is becoming much more than that. Because it sits at the intersection of issuance, investor access, administration, and increasingly market structure, it is building a serious information edge around tokenized securities.
The firm reported in March that NYSE is working with Securitize on a tokenized securities platform, and Securitize itself keeps positioning its product as the leading institutional tokenization stack. That combination of issuance, investor distribution, and market access gives it a strong claim to becoming one of the main interfaces through which people discover and evaluate tokenized assets.

Dinari
Dinari is one of the most interesting startups in this category because it is focused on tokenized public securities, which gives it a very specific data and access advantage. The company’s dShares product is built around 1:1-backed tokenized public-market securities. In 2025, Dinari became the first tokenized equity platform to secure U.S. broker-dealer registration for that business.
More recently, Dinari announced a partnership with Bitcoin.com to embed tokenized U.S. equity trading directly into that platform. If tokenized stocks become a serious market, Dinari could end up owning a valuable slice of the market data and distribution layer around them.

Archax
Archax is one of the stronger contenders from the regulated-market side. The company positions itself as a UK-regulated digital asset exchange and tokenization platform bridging traditional finance and digital assets. What makes Archax stand out is that it is not only about issuance or custody. It is building a fuller ecosystem around tokenization, distribution, custody, and trading.
That gives it the ingredients to become a serious information and access hub for tokenized funds, bonds, and other real-world assets, especially in Europe and institutional markets that care deeply about regulated wrappers.

Tokeny
Tokeny may not always get the same headlines as some of the larger tokenization brands, but it is doing exactly the kind of work that could make it indispensable. The company calls itself an “on-chain finance operating system,” and its platform is built around issuing tokenized securities, managing lifecycle events, enforcing compliance, and connecting assets to broader distribution channels.
That may sound more back-office than terminal-like, but in tokenized markets, the line between infrastructure and intelligence is getting thin. The firms that control asset metadata, compliance rules, and lifecycle management often end up controlling some of the most valuable information, too.

Figure Markets
Figure Markets is building toward a world where tokenized assets are not just issued, but actively traded and financed inside a broader on-chain market environment. Its platform already combines trading, borrowing, and yield products, and the company is pushing its On-Chain Public Equity Network, or OPEN, as a way to reinvent equity markets on blockchain rails.
That matters because Bloomberg Terminal-style dominance usually comes from being close to where assets are priced, traded, and financed. The figure looks like one of the startups trying to build that environment from the ground up rather than just reporting on it after the fact.

Libre, now KAIO
Libre, which rebranded as KAIO in 2025, is another startup worth watching because it is focused on tokenized investment funds rather than generic tokenization infrastructure. Reports around the rebrand said KAIO launched a $100 million tokenized Bitcoin diversified income fund and had already built ties to institutional managers like Laser Digital. Earlier, Libre had also made its investment funds available through Sui.
That makes KAIO interesting because it is not just helping bring funds on-chain. It is building the sort of curated investment gateway that could eventually function like a specialized terminal for tokenized fund products.

Brickken
Brickken is a smaller name, but it is worth taking seriously because it is trying to make tokenization much more operational for businesses. Its platform is centered on creating, managing, and automating compliant digital assets, and the company has been pushing hard to expand liquidity access for those assets through new partnerships.
Brickken is not the terminal today, but it is part of the class of startups trying to ensure tokenized assets come with structured information, lifecycle controls, and a cleaner management layer. If more mid-market issuers enter tokenization, that kind of platform could become surprisingly important.

Realize
Realize is a more focused bet, but still a meaningful one. Reuters reported that Realize launched the first tokenized Treasury fund domiciled in Abu Dhabi Global Market, with the $RBILL token representing units in a fund investing in U.S. Treasury-focused ETFs from BlackRock and State Street.
That alone does not make it a Bloomberg Terminal rival. But it does place Realize in one of the most important information-rich corners of the tokenized asset market, or rather, regulated tokenized yield products. If the company expands from a single product into a broader distribution and intelligence layer around tokenized funds, it could become a much more central player.

Why this race matters
The real winner here probably will not look exactly like the Bloomberg Terminal. Tokenized assets are too fragmented, too early, and too dependent on blockchain-native rails for that old model to translate perfectly. The more likely outcome is that several startups own different parts of the experience.
RWA.xyz may dominate broad market data, Inveniam may own private-asset intelligence, Securitize and Dinari may control major issuance and distribution channels, and firms like Figure, Archax, Tokeny, KAIO, Brickken, and Realize may become essential for narrower slices of the market. What matters is that tokenized assets are now large enough to need a real information layer, and these startups are racing to build it before incumbents fully wake up.
Disclaimer
In line with the Trust Project guidelines, please note that the information provided on this page is not intended to be and should not be interpreted as legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of advice. It is important to only invest what you can afford to lose and to seek independent financial advice if you have any doubts. For further information, we suggest referring to the terms and conditions as well as the help and support pages provided by the issuer or advertiser. MetaversePost is committed to accurate, unbiased reporting, but market conditions are subject to change without notice.
About The Author
Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.
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Alisa, a dedicated journalist at the MPost, specializes in crypto, AI, investments, and the expansive realm of Web3. With a keen eye for emerging trends and technologies, she delivers comprehensive coverage to inform and engage readers in the ever-evolving landscape of digital finance.



