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DEFI

Figure launches real-world asset consortium on Solana with Chainlink, Raydium

A new approach to real-world assets

Figure, a blockchain lending platform based in the United States, has started something interesting. They’ve formed what they’re calling a consortium on Solana, and it’s focused on real-world assets. The idea is pretty straightforward, I think—they want to make certain types of loans available to more people through decentralized finance.

What caught my attention is the group they’ve put together. Chainlink is involved, which makes sense because you need reliable data when dealing with assets from the traditional world. Raydium is there too, handling the trading side of things. And Gauntlet, which works on risk management. That’s a solid lineup, honestly.

How this might work for regular users

The consortium aims to handle over $1 billion in monthly on-chain loans. That’s a big number, but perhaps it’s more about the potential than current volume. The interesting part is that these would be loans that typically only banks or accredited investors can access. Things like mortgages, commercial real estate loans—assets that generate steady income.

If they can actually make this work, it could change how people think about DeFi. Right now, most of what happens in decentralized finance is about crypto assets. You’re trading tokens, providing liquidity for token pairs, that sort of thing. This would be different. You’d be getting exposure to traditional financial assets, but with the efficiency of blockchain.

The technology behind it

They’re using something called the PRIME liquid staking token and the Hastra liquidity protocol. These were developed with the Provenance Blockchain Foundation. The basic idea, from what I can tell, is to tokenize real-world debt so it can be traded easily. It needs to be liquid, which is where the staking token comes in.

There are other platforms involved too—Camino Finance and CASH will help with how these assets are created and managed. And Privy is working on making the whole experience easier for users. That last part is important, because if it’s too complicated, people won’t use it.

Not everything is simple

There are real challenges here, though. Tokenizing physical assets isn’t just a technical problem. There are legal questions, regulatory frameworks to navigate. Making sure the data about these off-chain assets is accurate and up-to-date is another issue. That’s probably why Chainlink’s involvement matters—they specialize in that kind of data connection.

But maybe the consortium approach helps with these challenges. Instead of one company trying to solve everything, you have different groups focusing on what they’re good at. Figure handles the lending side, Chainlink deals with data, Raydium with trading, Gauntlet with risk. It makes sense on paper.

What this could mean

If this works, it could open up investment opportunities that have been mostly closed to regular people. The kind of yields that come from real-world debt can be attractive, especially when compared to what’s available in traditional savings accounts or even some DeFi options.

But I’m cautious about getting too excited. These are early days, and real-world assets on blockchain have been talked about for years without becoming mainstream. The technology keeps getting better, though, and Solana’s speed and low costs might actually make this practical in a way it wasn’t before.

It’s worth watching, at least. The combination of established players working together on a specific blockchain could be what finally makes real-world assets work in DeFi. Or maybe it’s just another attempt that will face the same old problems. Time will tell, I suppose.

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