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    Standard Chartered’s $100 Uniswap call exposes the open DeFi problem Wall Street may need to solve

    Standard Chartered has set a $100 UNI target for the end of 2030, a forecast that would put one of DeFi’s largest governance tokens far above its current market range.

    The bank’s thesis states that tokenized assets may eventually require DeFi venues to convert fragmented on-chain instruments into usable liquidity.

    The Standard Chartered note said the bank assumes tokenized assets could reach $4 trillion by 2028. The same thesis puts the share active in DeFi rising from about 3.5% today to 30% by 2030.

    On that math, DeFi could hold over $2 trillion by 2030.

    Tokenization is being built by banks, asset managers, transfer agents, and regulated platforms, yet the liquidity layer could still reward open protocols if those assets require round-the-clock trading, collateral movement, and composability beyond a single issuer’s system.

    CryptoSlate data on June 16 showed UNI trading near $3.02, with a market cap of roughly $1.88 billion and 24-hour trading volume of about $353.9 million. The broader CryptoSlate coin rankings snapshot showed a crypto market of about $2.27 trillion and a daily trading volume of about $89.8 billion.

    Against that market backdrop, the practical question is whether tokenized Treasuries, funds, equities, stablecoins, and other on-chain assets become inventory for open liquidity, or stay in systems where access, settlement, and transfer remain tightly controlled.

    Infographic comparing open DeFi liquidity with controlled institutional rails for tokenized assets, including UNI, BUIDL, Citi, and FSB callouts.Infographic comparing open DeFi liquidity with controlled institutional rails for tokenized assets, including UNI, BUIDL, Citi, and FSB callouts.

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    The bank thesis depends on open liquidity

    The Standard Chartered call rests on a chain of assumptions. Tokenized assets first need to grow into a large enough market. A meaningful share, then, needs to become active in DeFi, rather than simply sitting on-chain as a record of ownership within a regulated wrapper.

    Finally, Uniswap has to capture enough of that activity for UNI economics to benefit. The claim shifts the focus from issuance to liquidity.

    Standard Chartered’s public work already frames tokenization as a large long-term opportunity. In 2024, the bank said a paper with Synpulse projected tokenized real-world assets could reach $30.1 trillion by 2034, with trade finance among the major categories.

    The same release said tokenization could create new applications in DeFi and new business models.

    Citi’s June 2026 tokenization report points in the same direction on market size, while adding a counterweight. Citi projected a $5.5 trillion base-case tokenized asset market by 2030 and an $8.2 trillion bull case.

    It also said hybrid models may dominate, with institutions controlling issuance, distribution, and settlement rails.

    The divide defines Uniswap’s opportunity. If tokenization grows but the value remains within bank platforms, transfer-agent systems, broker-dealer networks, or approved marketplaces, open DeFi plays a limited role.

    If assets need broader venues where different tokenized instruments, stablecoins, and collateral can trade against one another, protocols such as Uniswap become more central.

    DefiLlama data supports the view that Uniswap is a plausible candidate for that thesis. As of press time, the protocol had about $2.89 billion in total value locked across multiple chains and more than $50 million in 30-day fees.

    The present data only establishes an operating base, but it places Uniswap in the liquidity-infrastructure category rather than the pure governance-token category.

    For institutions, the distinction is practical. Issuing a fund token is one process; creating a venue where it can trade against stablecoins, collateral, and other tokenized instruments is another.

    That gap is where an open automated market maker could either become useful infrastructure or remain a marginal connection point.

    The venue decision, therefore, becomes as important as issuance, because liquidity determines whether tokenized products become usable markets, collateral, and settlement assets, or remain static records within approved systems.

    BUIDL shows the bridge and the gate

    BlackRock’s BUIDL fund provides a live example of the thesis. In February, Uniswap Labs and Securitize announced that BlackRock’s USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund was available for trading on UniswapX.

    The integration uses an RFQ framework, whitelisted subscribers, and pre-qualified participants.

    CryptoSlate’s earlier BUIDL coverage captured the central tension: BUIDL holders can swap into USDC through UniswapX, but the access is gated.

    The trade touches DeFi technology while keeping the asset limited to approved participants.

    BlackRock’s original BUIDL launch terms show how controlled that model can be. The fund was offered to qualified investors through Securitize, had a $5 million initial investment minimum, could be transferred only to pre-approved investors, and was not listed on an exchange.

    RWA.xyz showed BUIDL at about $2.37 billion in total asset value and 108 holders on June 16.

    Read together with the access terms, that supports a cautious view of tokenization’s current state: large tokenized products can exist on-chain while participation remains concentrated and permissioned.

    Standard Chartered’s own May 2026 investor presentation also cited BUIDL’s integration into Uniswap to enable distribution and trading.

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