The ‘Plumbing’ Phase: DLT Moves from Hype to Core Infrastructure

This week, the shift from DLT as a “fringe experiment” to “foundational infrastructure” became undeniable. The hype is subsiding, replaced by measurable adoption. A recent study highlights that 36% of capital markets stakeholders now have live DLT solutions, a massive leap from just 4% in 2020.

This isn’t about speculation; it’s about operational value.

1. Institutional Confidence and Infrastructure Rollouts

The world’s largest financial players are no longer just commenting on digital assets; they are building with them.

2. Cross-Sector Use Cases: AI and Autonomous Agents

Beyond finance, DLT is being designed as the trust layer for the next generation of AI and IoT.

3. Regulatory Architecture Catches Up

As DLT becomes embedded, regulators are moving from theory to practice.

  • United States:
  • United Kingdom:
    • The FCA’s tokenization roadmap is paving the way for regulatory modernization, confirming that existing rules already permit tokenized fund units while planning for future evolution.

4. Risks and Real-World Friction

This acceleration also brings complex challenges to the forefront.

  • The $25M MEV Exploit Trial: Two MIT-educated brothers are on trial for an alleged $25 million flash MEV exploit that took 12 seconds. The case highlights the critical, fuzzy boundary between an ingenious trading strategy and criminal theft in an evolving legal regime.
  • “Tokenization” vs. Investor Rights: Critics are warning that not all “tokenized” securities are created equal. Many may not properly embed legal investor rights, creating dangerous gaps in custody, transparency, and governance that issuers could exploit.

5. Societal Upsides: From Property Rights to Market Access

Amid the risks, DLT is delivering tangible public value.

  • Securing Land Rights in India: The government of Kerala announced it will use blockchain-based land records (“One Title – One Truth”) to create an immutable record of ownership. The goal is to achieve a land-dispute-free future by 2031, making fraud and forgery significantly harder.
  • Democratizing Finance: The UK’s tokenization push and France’s Lise exchange both point toward lowering friction in capital markets. This can increase inclusion for smaller issuers and democratize access to investments.
  • Accountable AI: Embedding DLT into AI ecosystems helps align autonomy with accountability, building a foundation for decentralized systems that are not just efficient, but trustworthy.

Bottom Line

This week reaffirmed that DLT is shifting from speculative frontier to foundational infrastructure. The firms that succeed will be those that combine technical excellence with rigorous legal, audit, and trust architectures.