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The ‘tokenization of everything’ is no longer a theory

By Jared Lindzon · Published April 29, 2026 · 7 min read · Source: CoinDesk
BlockchainAI & CryptoMarket Analysis
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The ‘tokenization of everything’ is no longer a theory

Wall Street is moving in. Washington has changed sides. And Consensus 2026 is where crypto’s biggest inflection point gets decided.

By Jared Lindzon, AI Boost|Edited by CoinDesk Apr 29, 2026, 6:15 p.m. Make preferred on
Miami Brickell in Florida, USA at sunset. View from above of skyscraper buildings in downtown district. American megapolis with business financial district
Consensus Miami is where the crypto industry decides what it looks like at scale.(Bilanol/Getty Images)

For a decade, the crypto industry has gathered at Consensus to discuss what was coming next. This year, something different is happening. The future has started arriving.

Real-world assets are being minted onchain. Stablecoins are quietly becoming the connective tissue of global commerce. Prediction markets are turning probability into a tradable asset class. The institutions that once dismissed all of this - Morgan Stanley, Nasdaq, the NYSE, DTCC, SWIFT, Franklin Templeton - are now sending their senior people to Miami to talk about how they fit in.

When Consensus 2026 convenes May 5–7 at the Miami Beach Convention Center, it won’t feel like a conference about crypto’s potential. It will feel like a summit about what happens next now that crypto’s promise has become the financial industry’s new reality.

The institutions have landed

For years, traditional finance circled the crypto industry from a cautious distance. That distance has collapsed.

The 2026 speaker roster reads like a who’s-who of institutional legitimacy: Mastercard, PayPal, T. Rowe Price, Nasdaq, NYSE, Morgan Stanley, SWIFT, and DTCC alongside crypto’s foundational builders. The sponsor list tells the same story: JPMorgan, Fidelity, Coinbase, Google, Bridge by Stripe, Broadridge, Circle, Grayscale, FTSE Russell and more. These are not exploratory delegations. They are bets.

“Consensus brings every pillar of the industry together for the largest crypto trade conference in North America,” says a Coinbase spokesperson. “That’s exactly where we want to be in order to move the needle.”

What drew them all in? The short answer is 24/7 markets. The longer answer is what those markets made possible.

Always on, everywhere at once

Blockchain infrastructure runs on internet time - no opening bell, no closing hour, no pause in price discovery. For years, traditional finance treated this as a quirk. They’ve since realized it’s a competitive advantage they don’t have.

In a world where capital moves at the speed of information and users expect their financial lives to work at midnight in Dubai as well as they do at noon in New York, always-on markets aren’t a novelty. They’re the standard. And now TradFi is racing to meet it.

The conversations at Consensus 2026 won’t debate whether 24/7 markets matter. They’ll debate the playbook: settlement rails, custody infrastructure, regulatory guardrails, and who controls the on-ramps.

Stablecoins: from bridge to backbone

Stablecoins were once described as a bridge between crypto and fiat. That framing is now outdated. Stablecoins have become infrastructure - the settlement layer for cross-border payments, the backbone of onchain commerce, and the first credible competitor to SWIFT for moving dollars at scale.

The next frontier is programmable money: protocols like x402 and Tempo’s Machine Payments Protocol are pointing toward a world where value moves as frictionlessly as data - without intermediaries, delays, or borders.

Expect stablecoins and their infrastructure to anchor multiple-stage conversations at the event. Cloudflare Chief Strategy Officer Stephanie Cohen, Robinhood SVP Johann Kerbrat, Ondo President Ian De Bode, and Tether US CEO Bo Hines will be among those shaping the conversation about stablecoins as a global settlement layer.

Everything gets tokenized

Tokenized treasuries. Onchain private credit. Fractional real estate. These sounded like thought experiments three years ago. Today, they are live products with real AUM, with institutions like Franklin Templeton and T. Rowe Price building on public blockchains.

What has changed is the convergence. Stablecoins provide the liquidity layer. Tokenized assets supply the product. Platforms like Coinbase create the access points. The infrastructure that once served only crypto-native users can now serve anyone with a brokerage account, a bank account, or a smartphone.

“Coinbase is now the Everything Exchange where you can trade crypto, stocks, commodities, prediction markets, and derivatives all in a single account,” says Max Branzburg, Coinbase’s head of consumer and business products. “Coinbase is also playing a central role as the trusted bridge that’s bringing the next trillion dollars of real-world assets onchain.”

That’s not a marketing line, it’s a roadmap. And Consensus is where that roadmap gets debated and amplified.

The unlikely onboarding ramp: prediction markets

Crypto’s new killer app may not be the one anyone expected. Prediction markets - platforms that let users trade on the outcomes of elections, economic events, sports results, and essentially anything quantifiable about the future - have quietly become one of the industry’s most powerful onboarding tools.

Kalshi, the CFTC-regulated prediction market leader, has shown that users arrive to take a position on inflation or a geopolitical flashpoint and leave having learned about wallets, tokens, and onchain transactions. The gamification is a gateway. The underlying infrastructure is the same blockchain rails that power DeFi and institutional RWA platforms.

Kalshi’s head of crypto John Wang will join Consensus to lay out his vision for the future of onchain sports betting and prediction markets - a sector that is growing faster than almost anything else in crypto and pulling in a user profile that traditional exchange products never could.

Miami: the right city for this moment

Consensus’ return to Miami is not incidental. The city has transformed into a nexus of finance, technology, and capital formation - a place where Latin American remittance flows, global wealth management, and crypto-native startup culture overlap in ways that feel unique to this moment in history.

“Miami is no longer just a leisure destination - it’s America 2.0,” says Ellie Platis, Solana’s Head of Events, who is hosting Solana Accelerate alongside Consensus. “A convergence point for the future of capital and culture. Its dynamic rise makes it the perfect place to showcase Solana’s role in powering the proliferation of Internet Capital Markets.”

With 20,000 expected attendees spanning crypto builders, Wall Street veterans, Washington insiders, and the next wave of onchain entrepreneurs, Consensus 2026 is less a conference about what’s coming and more a working summit for people who are already building it.

Why this year is different

Crypto has passed through several distinct eras. The ideologues arrived first, then the builders, then the speculators. The current wave is different: it’s the practitioners - asset managers, payment networks, regulators, and corporate treasurers - who are arriving not to explore but to deploy.

The technology has matured to meet them. Settlement is faster. Custody is institutional-grade. Regulation - slowly, fitfully, but unmistakably - is clarifying. The conditions for mainstream adoption are no longer aspirational. They are here.

Consensus 2026 is where that adoption gets a name, a framework, and a direction. The tokenization of everything isn’t coming. It’s already underway. Miami is where the industry decides what it looks like at scale.


Join 20,000+ industry leaders at Consensus 2026, May 5–7, in Miami. Register now at consensus.coindesk.com

Consensus Miami 2026

Note: The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk, Inc. or its owners and affiliates.

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk's full AI Policy.

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