3 articles tagged #Nvidia — curated RWA tokenization coverage.

Talos has released a structural taxonomy for tokenized stocks, categorizing them into issuer-native equity, custodial wrapped tokens, and derivative-based synthetic exposure. The report highlights that these categories offer fundamentally different legal claims, with issuer-native equity providing direct shareholder rights while synthetic exposure offers none. Using Nvidia as a case study, Talos demonstrates that instruments like Backed Finance’s NVDAx and Ondo Finance’s NVDAon exhibit significant pricing and liquidity divergence from perpetual futures. Data shows that Nvidia perpetual futures generated $6.3 billion in volume, exceeding the combined volume of tokenized spot products by over 40 times. This disparity underscores a market preference for capital efficiency and liquidity over the operational complexities of custody and redemption. The analysis emphasizes that as regulatory frameworks like the EU’s DLT Pilot Regime and MiCA evolve, the legal certainty of onchain claims will become a critical due diligence requirement for institutional investors. Ultimately, Talos argues that market participants must distinguish between these structures to accurately assess risk and execution quality in the growing RWA sector.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently identified Marvell Technology as a future trillion-dollar company during Computex 2026, triggering a 32.5% surge in the chipmaker's stock price. This valuation jump, which pushed Marvell's market cap to between $230 billion and $250 billion, follows a $2 billion strategic investment made by Nvidia in March 2026. Marvell is aggressively expanding its footprint in data center networking and custom AI silicon, recently launching a 102.4 Tbps AI/cloud switch and acquiring firms like Polariton Technologies and Celestial AI. While the company forecasts revenue growth to nearly $23 billion by fiscal 2029, analysts note that reaching a trillion-dollar valuation would require a significant price-to-sales multiple of 43x. The rise of tokenized equity has allowed blockchain-native investors to gain exposure to this volatility through platforms like Kraken, which offers MRVLx, and various Ondo-backed instruments. This development highlights the growing intersection between traditional AI-driven equity markets and decentralized finance. However, the rapid price movement underscores persistent risks in tokenized assets, specifically regarding liquidity and tracking accuracy during periods of high market volatility. Investors must remain cautious of potential price dislocations between the underlying stock and its blockchain-based counterparts.

Coin Metrics recently analyzed the evolving landscape of tokenized equities, using Nvidia as a primary case study to illustrate the spectrum of on-chain exposure. The market currently utilizes three distinct structures: issuer-native equity with full shareholder rights, custodial wrapped equity providing economic exposure, and derivative-based perpetual futures. Products like Backed’s NVDAx and Ondo’s NVDAON exemplify custodial wrapping, utilizing SPVs to provide one-to-one backing for Nvidia shares on Ethereum and Solana. While these tokens offer DeFi composability and 24/7 price discovery, they differ in legal structure and liquidity, occasionally creating arbitrage opportunities. Conversely, perpetual futures on platforms like Hyperliquid and Binance dominate trading volume, exceeding $6.3 billion and dwarfing spot tokenized markets by over 40 times due to their simplicity. This fragmentation highlights the trade-offs between direct asset ownership and the efficiency of derivative-based price tracking. As major entities like the DTCC and NYSE explore tokenized infrastructure, the sector is moving toward greater regulatory clarity and institutional integration. Ultimately, this diversity of approaches reflects a maturing market where participants must carefully weigh legal claims against accessibility and capital efficiency.