Thursday Nov 13 2025 02:20
3 min
Bitcoin's price swings are no longer significantly impacting institutional interest in crypto technology, particularly tokenization, suggesting it's now a self-sustaining sector, according to Thomas Cowan, head of tokenization at Galaxy. Speaking at The Bridge conference in New York City, Cowan told Cointelegraph that there has been a noticeable "separation of the interest in tokenization from the price of Bitcoin" in recent months.
He elaborated that in previous market cycles, surges in Bitcoin and altcoin prices would spur interest in tokenization, leading major traditional financial institutions to expand their crypto and tokenization teams. However, when prices crashed, these teams often faced significant reductions. "Now, I think we’re getting to the point where it’s almost independent of the price of Bitcoin, that people see the benefits that blockchain can have to move and store traditional financial assets," Cowan stated.
Tokenization, which involves representing assets such as oil or bonds digitally on a blockchain, has experienced considerable growth in the past year. This growth has been fueled, in part, by a more accommodating regulatory environment, encouraging interest from major traditional finance companies. While Bitcoin (BTC) has seen volatility throughout the year, peaking above $126,000 in early October before declining by approximately 20% to around $102,000, tokenization continues to attract attention.
Cowan expressed hope that the coming year will see the industry effectively demonstrate to institutions that tokenization "is just a better, faster, cheaper way for them to move and store their financial assets." He added, "For these large organizations that think in decades, you really want to make sure that we’re demonstrating the clear benefits that this technology has, so that they can say, ‘Look, we see this as a durable, long-term trend. It’s inevitable.’ They just see that technology as something that is going to be the back end of their financial institutions.”
Cowan highlighted stablecoins, which have gained popularity following recent regulatory developments, as a promising use case for crypto. He also noted the increasing institutional interest in tokenized money market funds, which invest in assets like government bonds. "As people move their capital onchain, they want that risk-free rate that they’re forgoing when they’re holding stablecoins," Cowan explained. "A very logical next step to go from stables to money market funds.”
Cowan concluded by suggesting that the industry is approaching a point where the technology demonstrably convinces major financial companies that have remained on the sidelines in previous cycles that tokenization is genuinely transformative. He encouraged investment, predicting significant developments within the next few years.
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