Traditional financial institutions hold massive capital reserves, so why have they yet to deploy on a large scale in the cryptocurrency space? On the surface, they appear cautious, but in reality, deeper concerns are at play.
This hesitation is not due to a fear of blockchain technology itself but rather a serious attitude toward risk management. The core demand from institutional investors is quite clear—they need a set of infrastructure that is both secure and compliant as a prerequisite for entry. Although the current crypto market is full of innovations, there are still obvious gaps in regulatory standards, risk control systems, and regulatory coordination. This causes traditional financial decision-makers to feel anxious rather than fearful.
The good news is that the path to solving this problem has already begun. With the continuous improvement of compliance infrastructure, the mature application of blockchain technology, and the emergence of various professional-grade solutions, the conditions for institutional funds to enter the crypto ecosystem are gradually becoming more favorable. In the future, once this system is sufficiently robust, a wave of concentrated capital from traditional finance may flow into the space.
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GasFeeBarbecue
· 8h ago
In simple terms, traditional finance is waiting for infrastructure to improve. Stop focusing on all the superficial stuff; the real bottlenecks are compliance and risk control.
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ConsensusBot
· 14h ago
Basically, old finance hasn't figured out how to play yet; they'll dare to get involved only after the infrastructure is in place.
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SudoRm-RfWallet/
· 14h ago
In simple terms, traditional finance is still waiting for the wind, while we have already taken off.
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FreeRider
· 14h ago
Basically, those big institutions want to eat the ready-made meal, but they're afraid of stepping on landmines. Is the compliant infrastructure in place? Ha, I think we still have to wait another five or six years.
Traditional financial institutions hold massive capital reserves, so why have they yet to deploy on a large scale in the cryptocurrency space? On the surface, they appear cautious, but in reality, deeper concerns are at play.
This hesitation is not due to a fear of blockchain technology itself but rather a serious attitude toward risk management. The core demand from institutional investors is quite clear—they need a set of infrastructure that is both secure and compliant as a prerequisite for entry. Although the current crypto market is full of innovations, there are still obvious gaps in regulatory standards, risk control systems, and regulatory coordination. This causes traditional financial decision-makers to feel anxious rather than fearful.
The good news is that the path to solving this problem has already begun. With the continuous improvement of compliance infrastructure, the mature application of blockchain technology, and the emergence of various professional-grade solutions, the conditions for institutional funds to enter the crypto ecosystem are gradually becoming more favorable. In the future, once this system is sufficiently robust, a wave of concentrated capital from traditional finance may flow into the space.