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"RWA is not just about issuing a coin" | Five major pitfalls that enterprises must avoid when doing RWA
With the rise of the RWA (Real World Asset tokenization) concept, more and more companies are contemplating: Can I also move my assets onto the blockchain? Can I also raise funds, provide liquidity, and attract global investors? But the reality is: RWA is far from being as simple as imagined. From asset structure design, legal compliance, regulatory filing, to smart contract deployment and Token issuance and circulation, this is not a "coin issuance" project, but a system engineering project that spans on-chain and off-chain. This article will help you see clearly in one go: The 5 key issues that enterprises need to solve when dealing with RWA: What challenges can lawyers help you address at each step? Why these pitfalls must be avoided sooner or later. The first pitfall: Assets are not just there because you say they are; you first need to "depict" them. Many projects start by saying they want to do RWA, but — Not clear about your underlying assets? Are they rights to income, debt rights, or securities? Do they have sustainable returns? Can they be legally transferred? If these issues are not clear, then the project cannot be launched. What needs to be done at this stage is an asset eligibility analysis. This step can help you with a lawyer: Identify which of your assets are "tokenizable" to assess their yield structure, risk level, and compliance suitability, and to preliminarily determine whether they involve the regulatory red lines of finance, securities, and commodities. This step is actually very simple; it helps you clarify whether your assets can be utilized and why you should do it. For example: if you want to send your child abroad for study, you need to first understand their academic background, interest direction, and budget capability. You can't just pay the tuition without even deciding on a major. RWA is the same - not all assets are suitable for being on the chain, and not all on-chain assets have financing value. The second pitfall: a dual approach of technology and law, don't let the project die structurally. RWA is not as simple as "on-chain registration"; it is a full-chain design that achieves clear legal ownership, a closed loop of technical logic, and compliance from a regulatory perspective. You need to address at least three issues: Is the ownership and transfer of assets legal? Is it transferable? How is the legal nature of restricted tokens defined? Could it possibly constitute a security token? Does the technical architecture support on-chain compliance? Can it meet regulatory requirements (such as traceability, black and white lists, etc.)? In this step, the legal team is not the "coin issuance and stamping person," but rather the structural designer + regulatory translator + compliance liaison.
Conclusion: RWA is not a "new bottle with old wine" for blockchain; it is a challenge and opportunity deeply coupled with law, finance, and technology. If you are really ready to take this path, please remember: Compliance must come first; do not experiment with the project's legal structure, which must be rigorous. Do not leave compliance loopholes. Technical implementation must "understand the language of the law"; do not let the contract create problems. As a lawyer, we are not just the person who "stamps and signs", but also the one who builds bridges and paves the way for you between law, regulation, and the market. After saying so much, you might ask a question: "RWA is so complicated, and the compliance costs are so high. Why do I have to go through all this? Isn't it better to just stay in my familiar field?" This problem is quite normal. After all, RWA, as an emerging concept, comes with cognitive thresholds, structural difficulties, and technological iterations. However, historically, every paradigm shift—whether from horse-drawn carriages to cars, or from paper money to electronic payments—initially seemed "troublesome, unnecessary, and inefficient." Until one day, we realize: the new paradigm is not meant to replace a portion of people, but to rewrite the entire market's rules of the game. RWA is the same. It is not just a technological innovation, but the beginning of how traditional assets are revalued in the global financial infrastructure. For enterprises, it signifies a fundamental reshaping of financing logic, liquidity management, and the way investors are reached. The earlier you understand and layout, the more likely you are to secure your own place in the new rules. Welcome to cooperate and consult. We are willing to be your long-term legal partner for the RWA project from 0 to 1.
Original Author: Lawyer Niu Xiaojing