Tokenization was the central theme at this year’s Singapore FinTech Festival, where regulators and global financial institutions signalled that programmable finance is moving out of the lab and into selective production environments. What began as a multi-year experiment under Singapore’s Project Guardian is now shaping into a cross-border framework capable of handling institutional-grade assets.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) highlighted new progress across tokenized bonds, money-market funds, deposits, and treasury products. Banks involved in the initiative — including HSBC, Standard Chartered, DBS, and Citi — shared early findings on settlement compression, automated lifecycle management, and the ability to unlock near-real-time liquidity through tokenized cash and collateral.
Several banks said they are preparing “minimum-viable production” environments, with controlled flows managed through programmable settlement rails. Corporate treasuries showed increased interest in intraday liquidity tools, real-time NAV-calculated funds, and tokenized repo structured with automated margining.
Another theme was cross-regional regulatory alignment. Singapore, Hong Kong, the UAE, and the UK reported ongoing dialogue on interoperability standards for tokenized assets and institutional stablecoins. Market participants emphasized that regulatory clarity — especially on licensed issuance, custody, and on-chain settlement obligations — is now maturing in a way that encourages large-scale pilots.
Industry speakers agreed that tokenization is no longer framed as a disruption to traditional finance but as an upgrade to its underlying infrastructure. While challenges remain — including legal enforceability of tokenized assets and integration with legacy systems — SFF 2025 showed clear momentum toward practical, institutional deployment.
As programmable finance advances across Asia, the coming year is expected to bring broader distribution of tokenized funds, increased availability of institutional stablecoins, and greater alignment between major financial centers on digital-asset market structure.