OpenLedger's vision goes far beyond serving the Web3 user base; its ultimate goal is to penetrate the institutional market and become the ledger standard recognized by banks, brokerages, and clearinghouses. Only when OpenLedger's ledger system can seamlessly integrate with the traditional financial system can it truly become a backbone of global clearing infrastructure.
The financial landscape of 2025 has already revealed three significant development trends: First, the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) has gained recognition from traditional financial institutions including Blackstone, BlackRock, and Franklin; Second, stablecoin payments have been integrated into the cross-border transaction systems by payment giants such as Visa, PayPal, and OKX; Finally, AI agent technology has deeply penetrated enterprise production processes, and the strategic partnership between Databricks and OpenAI further indicates that enterprise-level AI agents are being deployed on a large scale.
These trends clearly outline the future blueprint at the intersection of traditional finance, RWA, and AI agents, with OpenLedger positioned right at this intersection, expected to become the standard for clearing ledgers in the new era.
So, why do institutional-level markets urgently need a 'distributed ledger'?
First of all, for financial institutions such as banks and brokerages, the key is not how complex the tasks that agents can perform are, but rather the auditability of the bills. Auditing, compliance, and settlement are the real thresholds for entering institutional systems.
Secondly, AI agents are gradually taking over the cash flow of enterprises. An increasing number of corporate CFOs are beginning to entrust part of the budget, such as advertising, procurement, and subscriptions, to AI agents for management. Without a unified and reliable ledger system, this trend could pose significant risks.
In this new era where AI and finance are deeply integrated, OpenLedger's institutional ambitions come at the right time. It aims not only to be a bridge connecting traditional finance and emerging technologies but also to play a key role in the AI-driven settlement revolution. This revolution will reshape the global financial settlement infrastructure, bringing unprecedented efficiency improvements and innovation opportunities to the financial industry.
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NguyenMinhHai
· 5h ago
hi
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LiquiditySurfer
· 6h ago
Another wave of the bull run standard gold-plated story?
OpenLedger's vision goes far beyond serving the Web3 user base; its ultimate goal is to penetrate the institutional market and become the ledger standard recognized by banks, brokerages, and clearinghouses. Only when OpenLedger's ledger system can seamlessly integrate with the traditional financial system can it truly become a backbone of global clearing infrastructure.
The financial landscape of 2025 has already revealed three significant development trends: First, the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) has gained recognition from traditional financial institutions including Blackstone, BlackRock, and Franklin; Second, stablecoin payments have been integrated into the cross-border transaction systems by payment giants such as Visa, PayPal, and OKX; Finally, AI agent technology has deeply penetrated enterprise production processes, and the strategic partnership between Databricks and OpenAI further indicates that enterprise-level AI agents are being deployed on a large scale.
These trends clearly outline the future blueprint at the intersection of traditional finance, RWA, and AI agents, with OpenLedger positioned right at this intersection, expected to become the standard for clearing ledgers in the new era.
So, why do institutional-level markets urgently need a 'distributed ledger'?
First of all, for financial institutions such as banks and brokerages, the key is not how complex the tasks that agents can perform are, but rather the auditability of the bills. Auditing, compliance, and settlement are the real thresholds for entering institutional systems.
Secondly, AI agents are gradually taking over the cash flow of enterprises. An increasing number of corporate CFOs are beginning to entrust part of the budget, such as advertising, procurement, and subscriptions, to AI agents for management. Without a unified and reliable ledger system, this trend could pose significant risks.
In this new era where AI and finance are deeply integrated, OpenLedger's institutional ambitions come at the right time. It aims not only to be a bridge connecting traditional finance and emerging technologies but also to play a key role in the AI-driven settlement revolution. This revolution will reshape the global financial settlement infrastructure, bringing unprecedented efficiency improvements and innovation opportunities to the financial industry.