Ondo Finance, founded by Nathan Allman (a former Goldman Sachs trader), bridges the gap between traditional finance yields and DeFi composability. The protocol tokenizes US Treasuries and other fixed-income products, making them available as yield-bearing tokens that can be used throughout the DeFi ecosystem. USDY (US Dollar Yield) and OUSG (Ondo US Government Bond fund) became two of the most-used tokenized RWA products by 2024.
The value proposition is straightforward: why hold a non-yielding stablecoin when you could hold a tokenized Treasury bill earning 5%+ APY? USDY provides dollar-denominated yield without requiring users to interact with traditional financial infrastructure. For DeFi protocols, integrating USDY as collateral or a yield source brings “real” yield — derived from US government debt, not token emissions — into the onchain economy.
Ondo expanded across multiple chains (Ethereum, Solana, Mantle, Sui) and partnered with major DeFi protocols for integration. The ONDO token launched through a points-based system and quickly became one of the highest-valued RWA protocol tokens by market cap. Ondo’s success demonstrated strong demand for the RWA value proposition: institutional-grade yield with DeFi’s composability and 24/7 accessibility.
The challenges are regulatory and structural. Tokenized securities are still securities — they require compliance with securities laws, KYC for investors, and careful legal structuring. Ondo uses a permissioned transfer system (only whitelisted addresses can hold USDY/OUSG) to maintain compliance, which limits composability. The tension between regulatory compliance and DeFi’s permissionless ethos is the core design challenge for all RWA protocols. Ondo’s approach — compliance-first with selective DeFi integration — may be less “pure” crypto but is probably the only path to tokenizing trillions of dollars in traditional assets.
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