
Blockchain’s role in financial markets is moving decisively away from native cryptocurrency products toward infrastructure that solves real capital formation problems in energy, artificial intelligence, and robotics. Framework Ventures, a San Francisco-based crypto venture firm, has raised a $400 million fund to capitalize on this shift, betting that tokenization and stablecoins will become the primary financing layer for industries that require new mechanisms to raise capital at scale.
Michael Anderson, Framework’s cofounder, articulated the distinction clearly: the industry has transitioned from building crypto-native products for crypto users in the 2020-2021 cycle to deploying Blockchain Infrastructure for sectors outside the cryptocurrency ecosystem entirely. This represents not a rebrand of crypto but a fundamental reorientation of where the technology creates the most value for founders and institutions.
The capital formation challenge in AI infrastructure illustrates the practical advantage of blockchain-based tokenization. Traditional securitization markets struggle to package individual servers or computing equipment into investable instruments. Tokenization creates a bridge: computing hardware such as GPUs can be converted into blockchain-based collateral that can be financed with the more than $300 billion in stablecoins already circulating onchain. This creates what Anderson describes as a new source of capital for asset-backed lending that did not exist before.
Framework has already deployed capital in this thesis through investments in companies like Daylight, which finances residential solar projects through a distributed energy network, and Uranium Digital, which is building a tokenized marketplace for physical uranium. These are not speculative protocol plays or governance token experiments. They are capital market infrastructure that addresses concrete bottlenecks in how energy projects and commodities are financed.
The energy sector demonstrates the same principle at larger scale. Residential solar projects, uranium markets, and infrastructure development require upfront capital that traditional financial markets often allocate inefficiently. Tokenization allows these assets to be fractionalized and offered to a broader investor base, with settlement and custody handled by stablecoins rather than legacy banking rails.
Anderson noted a critical shift in the type of founder building blockchain companies today. Rather than anonymous crypto-native developers launching speculative protocols, many founders now come from traditional finance, energy, and industrial technology backgrounds, bringing domain expertise while using blockchain as the underlying financial infrastructure. This generational change reflects growing institutional comfort with blockchain as a utility rather than a speculative asset class.
This founder diversity also shapes the kinds of problems being solved. Someone with deep experience in securitization or energy finance approaching blockchain is not interested in building a decentralized exchange or a new DeFi token. They are interested in how tokenization and real-world asset frameworks can reduce friction and cost in markets that already exist, but that are capital-constrained or operationally inefficient.
Parallel to Framework’s capital deployment in tokenization and AI infrastructure, Ripple has expanded its institutional blockchain strategy in South Korea, a market that remains one of the largest retail and institutional centers for Digital Assets. Ripple president Monica Long is scheduled to speak at XRP Seoul on October 3 during Korea Blockchain Week, where the event is expected to draw more than 3,000 attendees and over 100 companies focused on XRP Ledger ecosystem development and institutional blockchain finance.
Ripple’s activities in South Korea now include custody pilots, tokenized bond settlement, developer programs, and institutional Blockchain Infrastructure. A notable pilot with Kyobo Life Insurance supports near real-time settlement of tokenized Korean government bonds, while parallel work explores payment infrastructure using RLUSD, Ripple’s stablecoin. These initiatives are not marketing efforts but operational deployments of blockchain infrastructure into existing institutional markets.
The South Korean regulatory and market environment has proven receptive to blockchain infrastructure in ways that support both retail participation and institutional adoption. XRP remains one of the highest-volume digital assets on local exchanges during periods of elevated activity, and the country’s developer community is actively building financial applications on the XRP Ledger through programs like the XRPL Korea Financial Innovation Program 2026.
The shift in how venture capital is being deployed reflects genuine belief that tokenization and stablecoins solve problems worth billions in trapped or inefficient capital. Framework’s $400 million fund is not an outlier; it represents a broader reallocation of crypto-focused venture dollars toward companies that serve industries beyond crypto itself. These industries-AI infrastructure, energy, commodities, and physical asset financing-have regulatory clarity, established market structures, and documented capital formation constraints that tokenization can address.
The thesis relies on two technical prerequisites: stablecoins must achieve sufficient scale and trust to function as reliable settlement assets (which the $300 billion onchain circulation suggests is already achieved), and blockchain infrastructure must integrate seamlessly with existing compliance and custody frameworks. South Korea’s institutional pilots and Framework’s infrastructure investments suggest both conditions are increasingly met, though scaling and regulatory harmonization across jurisdictions remain open questions.
What distinguishes this moment from earlier crypto cycles is that success no longer depends on crypto adoption rates or speculation. A tokenized solar financing market does not require XRP or Ethereum to become mainstream retail payment networks. It requires blockchain to function as plumbing between existing capital pools and previously inaccessible or inefficient asset classes. Framework and Ripple’s institutional infrastructure plays are designed around that narrower, more defensible thesis.