TL;DR
On-chain data indicates that tokenized commodities have crossed the $6 billion threshold this week, propelled by accelerating demand for gold-backed assets. The sector’s market cap now stands at $6.126 billion, reflecting a growing investor shift toward blockchain-based representations of physical commodities. Although still a small slice of the broader tokenized asset landscape, the rapid expansion highlights rising confidence in digital claims to tangible stores of value.
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Tokenized commodities represent roughly 1.87% of the $328.156 billion tokenized asset market as of February 9. Ethereum dominates the sector with $5.933 billion in tokenized commodities, far outpacing Arbitrum One at $98.112 million. The BNB Chain and Plasma network follow with $26.87 million and $21.45 million, respectively. The distribution underscores Ethereum’s continued role as the primary settlement layer for institutional-grade tokenized assets.
Tether remains the largest issuer in the category, holding $3.57 billion in tokenized commodities through its Tether Gold tokens. Paxos follows with $2.31 billion, driven by rising interest in Pax Gold. Pleasing Gold on Arbitrum One accounts for $97.82 million, while Matrixdock Gold contributes roughly $37 million on Ethereum and $26.87 million on the BNB Chain. The surge coincides with gold testing new highs above $5,000, with prices currently near $5,114 per ounce.

The tokenized commodities market has grown more than 4x since late 2024, fueled by institutional participation. Paxos reported record January inflows, adding approximately 1.68 metric tons of gold and lifting its total holdings in London to more than 13 metric tons. Investors appear to be seeking stability amid macroeconomic uncertainty and declining crypto prices, turning to on-chain gold for exposure with near-instant settlement.
Despite rapid growth, concerns persist regarding whether gold tokens are fully backed, independently audited, and redeemable. Past commodity-related bankruptcies, including MF Global’s 2011 collapse, have heightened scrutiny. Michael Ashley Schulman of Running Point Capital Advisors noted that most risks remain off-chain, tied to custodial and legal structures. Paxos asserts its tokens are 100% backed by allocated gold in London vaults, while Tether states its tokens represent ownership of physical gold.
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