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Just caught an interesting take from Keyrock's CEO that's worth thinking through. He's basically saying bitcoin is being massively undervalued right now, and the market is completely misreading what's actually happening in digital assets.
Here's the thing - BTC is sitting around $73K, down about 8% over the past year even though we've seen ridiculous amounts of regulatory progress and institutional adoption. Like, by any normal logic, that should have sent prices way higher. But instead it's been trading like a risk-on asset that people dump the second things get shaky. Capital flows look tactical now, not ideological.
De Patoul's argument is that we're not in a typical crypto cycle anymore. We're in a transition year. The speculative rallies that used to move everything? They're harder to sustain now. Instead you're getting very surgical opportunities in specific areas. Meanwhile, the institutional side is quietly building out something completely different - tokenized funds, stablecoins, onchain settlement infrastructure. That part hasn't slowed down at all.
What's wild is the disconnect between the two markets developing in parallel. You've got the crypto-native side - DeFi, altcoins, the traditional cycle dynamics - which feels subdued. Then you've got the digitization of traditional finance, which is moving steadily forward regardless of bitcoin's price action. Institutions are still as enthusiastic as ever about moving real finance onchain.
The catch? The infrastructure exists now, but the utility layer isn't finished yet. They've tokenized everything, but liquidity in a lot of these products is still thin. You can wrap an asset in a token, but that doesn't automatically connect it to both traditional capital pools and digital markets seamlessly. We're stuck in this in-between phase where the pieces are there but not yet integrated.
This is why de Patoul sees 2027 and 2028 as the real inflection point for digital markets. Traditional capital markets are orders of magnitude bigger than crypto. If even a small percentage starts migrating onchain, the scale of tokenized assets could dwarf anything we've seen in previous crypto cycles. We could be looking at a situation where real-world asset tokenization grows to match or exceed the size of crypto's last cycle peak.
The way he frames it makes sense - this isn't a price-led boom waiting to happen. It's a structural rewiring of financial infrastructure. The quiet build-out of market infrastructure might matter way more than any short-term rally. Regulatory clarity is still the gating factor though. If things like the proposed Clarity Act get delayed, it'll push back the timeline for institutions to invest at scale.
Keyrock itself is positioned as a bridge between traditional and digital finance, which explains why they're so focused on moving from tokenization toward actual functionality and scale. The foundations are going in now, but the real scale is still ahead. That's the actual story here.