by Yogi Nelson
Tokenization promises a lot—speed, transparency, global access, and the ability to move physical assets at digital speed. But there’s one uncomfortable question the space doesn’t like to linger on:
Who’s on the other side of the trade?

Liquidity is not about technology. It’s about participation.
An asset can be perfectly tokenized and still be difficult to buy or sell in meaningful size without moving the price. When that happens, confidence erodes quickly—no matter how elegant the blockchain design may be.
This is especially true in tokenized metals.
Gold begins with a structural advantage: deep global markets, standardized bars, central bank participation, and centuries of trust. Silver follows, but with more volatility. Other metals—platinum, palladium, and especially rhodium—face much steeper liquidity challenges that tokenization alone cannot solve.
The hard truth is this: Tokenization digitizes access. Liquidity determines usability.
That’s where market makers, institutional participation, predictable redemption, and market structure come into play. Liquidity isn’t created by opening the doors—it’s earned through trust, depth, and consistent participation.
Technology helps. But economics still has the final say.
If you’re interested in where tokenized metals realistically stand today—and what would need to change for them to reach global volume—I explore the liquidity question in depth in my latest long-form piece.
Yogi Nelson
Part of an ongoing, long-form series examining the tokenization of precious metals—one of the few sustained efforts to explore custody, liquidity, redemption, and market structure throughout 2026.
