I'm getting asked a lot why RWAs care about decentralization, when an offchain issuer can just unwind things when things go bad on a low security chain.
For me, this argument shows a lack of imagination.
Yes, many of today's RWAs are exactly this. Thin pointers to assets that are governed by offchain contracts and legal systems.
But why would you expect things to stay that way?
We already know we can create crypto-native assets that offer you many guarantees that no RWA can.
We know that we can build transparent, onchain governance mechanisms that can add layers of safety in similar ways to traditional legal systems.
We know that wrapped tradfi assets will always add more compliance, counterparty, and censorship risk compared to assets that live purely onchain, and that these onchain guarantees are valuable for holders.
Someday many governments will realize that running their own property systems will be cheaper and more efficient to run onchain than their current archaic systems.
The true end state to think about is when all assets are crypto-native, and when all the rules around them are encoded onchain. (Let's also not forget the thousands of purely digital assets that haven't even been invented yet)
When this happens, the security, decentralization, fairness, neutrality, and censorship resistance of the underlying chain will be the _most_ import dimension, not an afterthought.
And when that happens we will stop using the word "RWA" because the distinction will be meaningless.
Ethereum’s real moat isn’t “first-mover tech.” It’s a $100B+ pool of permissionless capital that only decentralization can unlock.
DeFi’s breakthrough wasn’t lower fees; it was borderless capital. New projects, yield vaults, and tokenized RWAs plug in because that capital is already on-chain.
Capital chases security. The more decentralized the chain, the smaller the trust assumption—and the deeper the capital stack willing to settle there.
High-TPS chains that dial down decentralization may win transactions, but they surrender the balance sheet. Throughput can be copied; Lindy capital cannot.